THE SUNLIT CARIBBEANby Alec Waugh
โ Scribed by Review by: PAUL REDWOOD
- Book ID
- 125316789
- Publisher
- Informa UK (Taylor & Francis)
- Year
- 1949
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 192 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-6495
- DOI
- 10.2307/40652456
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Based on the author's own experience as an officer in the British Intelligence and packed with the most closely observed detail of the people, places and costumes of the Levant, *The Mule on the Minaret* is a long, colourful, fascinating story of wartime intelligence centred on Beirut and Baghdad.
This book tells the story of the Balliol family as they exist through the suffrage movement and the end of the Edwardian era to the Great War. The Balliol children are subject to the effects of the war โ the harsh discipline and the subsequent laxness, the breakup of family loyalties, the post-war
This book tells the story of the Balliol family as they exist through the suffrage movement and the end of the Edwardian era to the Great War. The Balliol children are subject to the effects of the war โ the harsh discipline and the subsequent laxness, the breakup of family loyalties, the post-war
To the casual visitor Santa Marta is a sub-tropical paradise, a small sister of Jamaica, Bermuda and Nassau, unmentioned in the colour-splashed brochures of travel agents: an island where the sun shines throughout the year on the sandy beaches of innumerable coves, on the cane-fields and coconut pla
Alec Waugh first saw the West Indies on a trip round the world in 1926 when his ship called in at Guadeloupe. Fifteen months later he returned for a long stay at Martinique; it was the beginning of a lifelong interest in these fascinating islands that were to provide him with the material for many b