Barnaby Rogerson on Peter Fleming: What Makes a Man?

If you have not yet read Brazilian Adventure or News from Tartary you are in for a roller-coaster of adventure and misadventure. You will also be left in awe at the stamina, bravery, enterprise and self-deprecating humour of Peter Fleming, as well as appreciating the nonchantly camouflaged steel of his ambition.  He is a fascinating example of pluck in whatever extreme situation he finds himself, but always given an individual twist, for his adventurous spirit was married to a rapier-like skill with words and a dedication to the truth. He also had a lifelong delight in the theatre, which he put into practice by marrying one of the great actresses of the age, against the determined opposition of his mother.  His friends recognized this rare combination of physical toughness, literary precision and delight in life by likening him to a figure from Elizabethan times. 

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Brazilian Adventure by Peter Fleming

Brazilian Adventure is as fresh a story today as it was when originally published in 1933.
 
It began with an advertisement in the agony column of The Times: ‘Leaving England June, to explore rivers Central Brazil, if possible ascertain fate Colonel Fawcett; abundance game, big and small; exceptional fishing; room two more guns.’ Colonel Fawcett and his son Jack had embarked on a journey in 1925 in search of a supposed lost city and were never seen again. This expedition was too much of a temptation for Peter Fleming, a young
journalist with energy and an appetite for adventure.

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