A Long Walk Home

One Woman's Story of Kidnap, Hostage, Loss - and Survival

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book A Long Walk Home by Judith Tebbutt, Faber & Faber
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Judith Tebbutt ISBN: 9780571303038
Publisher: Faber & Faber Publication: July 1, 2013
Imprint: Faber & Faber Language: English
Author: Judith Tebbutt
ISBN: 9780571303038
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Publication: July 1, 2013
Imprint: Faber & Faber
Language: English

This is the story of how, over a period of one hundred and ninety-two days, I was torn away from the life I knew and loved, and dragged down to the depths of despair; of how I endured enforced isolation and near-starvation at the hands of Somali pirates; and of how I made a choice to survive by any and all means that I could muster.

In September 2011 Judith Tebbutt and her husband David set out on an adventurous holiday to Kenya. A couple for thirty-three years, they had first met in Zambia: Africa had played a major part in their life together. After a joyous week on safari in the Masai Mara, they flew on to a beach resort forty kilometres south of Somalia. And there, in the early hours of 11 September, tragedy struck them.

Judith was torn away from David by a band of armed pirates, dragged over sea and land to a village in the arid heart of lawless Somalia, and there held hostage in a squalid room, a ransom on her head. There, too, she learned the terrible truth that the responsibility of securing her release now rested with her son Ollie.

But though she was isolated, intimidated and near-starved, Judith resolved to survive - walking endless circuits of her nine-foot prison, trying to make her captors see her as a human being, keeping her faith at all times in Ollie.
Powerful, moving and at times quite devastating, this is Judith Tebbutt's story in her own words. It is a memoir of the life she shared with her beloved husband, an unflinching account of the ordeal that overturned her world, and a testament to the inner resilience and familial love that sustained her through captivity.

There is nothing so bad in life as to have no hope - to believe you have been defeated, to give in to that. Now that I found myself in confinement, four thousand miles from home under a hostile sky, I would not accept that fate for myself.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This is the story of how, over a period of one hundred and ninety-two days, I was torn away from the life I knew and loved, and dragged down to the depths of despair; of how I endured enforced isolation and near-starvation at the hands of Somali pirates; and of how I made a choice to survive by any and all means that I could muster.

In September 2011 Judith Tebbutt and her husband David set out on an adventurous holiday to Kenya. A couple for thirty-three years, they had first met in Zambia: Africa had played a major part in their life together. After a joyous week on safari in the Masai Mara, they flew on to a beach resort forty kilometres south of Somalia. And there, in the early hours of 11 September, tragedy struck them.

Judith was torn away from David by a band of armed pirates, dragged over sea and land to a village in the arid heart of lawless Somalia, and there held hostage in a squalid room, a ransom on her head. There, too, she learned the terrible truth that the responsibility of securing her release now rested with her son Ollie.

But though she was isolated, intimidated and near-starved, Judith resolved to survive - walking endless circuits of her nine-foot prison, trying to make her captors see her as a human being, keeping her faith at all times in Ollie.
Powerful, moving and at times quite devastating, this is Judith Tebbutt's story in her own words. It is a memoir of the life she shared with her beloved husband, an unflinching account of the ordeal that overturned her world, and a testament to the inner resilience and familial love that sustained her through captivity.

There is nothing so bad in life as to have no hope - to believe you have been defeated, to give in to that. Now that I found myself in confinement, four thousand miles from home under a hostile sky, I would not accept that fate for myself.

More books from Faber & Faber

Cover of the book Borgon the Axeboy and the Dangerous Breakfast by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book About Hare by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Return to the Marshes by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Anomaly by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Hampton on Hampton by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Alexander I by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book The Decline of Power, 1915–1964 by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Tusk Tusk by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book The Time by the Sea by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book The Children of Green Knowe Collection by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book The Twelve Days of Christmas by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book A Very Very Very Dark Matter by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Improve your sight-reading! Piano Grade 4 by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Sibelius Volume III: 1914-1957 by Judith Tebbutt
Cover of the book Nelson and Napoleon by Judith Tebbutt
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy