With dry, laconic wit, Norman Lewis remembers his transformation from stammering Welsh schoolboy to worldy wise, multilingual sergeant in the Intelligence Corps, on the cusp of becoming a writer. With a calm, observant gaze from the start, the young Norman moves from Spiritualist parents in Enfield to live with supremely dotty aunts in Carmarthen, whose baking of a weekly cake to feed the jackdaws gives the book its title. Escaping his eccentric family by marrying the daughter of a Sicilian associate of the Mafia, Norman made a living as a wedding photographer and by dealing in cameras, while restoring and racing Bugattis for pleasure. Here we see his first journeys in Spain, Cuba and the Yemen and a wartime spent in Algeria, Sicily and Italy, all of which acted as an apprenticeship for his career as one of the twentieth century's greatest travel writers.
An Empire of the East : Travels in Indonesia
Norman Lewis
bookDragon Apparent : Travels in Cambodia, Laos & Vietnam
Norman Lewis
bookA Quiet Evening : The Travels of Norman Lewis
Norman Lewis
bookA Goddess in the Stones : Travels in India
Norman Lewis
bookIn Sicily
Norman Lewis
bookThe Tomb in Seville
Norman Lewis
bookJackdaw Cake : An Autobiography
Norman Lewis
bookThe Missionaries : God against the Indians
Norman Lewis
bookVoices of the Old Sea
Norman Lewis
bookGolden Earth : Travels in Burma
Norman Lewis
bookHonoured Society : The Sicilian Mafia observed
Norman Lewis
bookView of the World : Selected Journalism
Norman Lewis
book