In this Sunday Times Top Ten bestselling memoir that 'reads like a thriller', (Joanna Lumley) Colour-Sargent Kailash Limbu shares a riveting account of his life as a Gurkha soldier-marking the first time in its two-hundred-year history that a soldier of the Brigade of Gurkhas has been given permission to tell his story in his own words. In the summer of 2006, Colour-Sargeant Kailash Limbu's platoon was sent to relieve and occupy a police compound in the town of Now Zad in Helmand. He was told to prepare for a forty-eight hour operation. In the end, he and his men were under siege for thirty-one days one of the longest such sieges in the whole of the Afghan campaign. Kailash Limbu recalls the terrifying and exciting details of those thirty-one days in which they killed an estimated one hundred Taliban fighters and intersperses them with the story of his own life as a villager from the Himalayas. He grew up in a place without roads or electricity and didn't see a car until he was fifteen. Kailash's descriptions of Gurkha training and rituals including how to use the lethal Kukri knife are eye-opening and fascinating. They combine with the story of his time in Helmand to create a unique account of one man's life as a Gurkha.
Manufacturer
- Publisher
- Little Brown Book Group
- Language
- English
- Subtitle
- Better to Die than Live a Coward: My Life in the Gurkhas
- Cover
- Soft
- Number of Pages
- 352
- Attribute
- Military & Historical Figures
- Publication Date
- 2016
- Dimensions
- 14x21 cm
- ISBN-13
- 9780349140100
Important information
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