In this rattling-good memoir, novelist, historian, and screenwriter Fraser vividly recounts the nerve-racking frontline action he saw while serving as a nineteen-year-old soldier during what turned out to be the last great land campaign of World War II--the British army's ferocious campaign against the Japanese in Burma. The realism of his story, combined with the skills of a talented novelist, create a book of sentiment and excitement. This is unforgettable reading, both for fans of Fraser's novels and for anyone interested in one of the great battles of World War II.
Fraser offers a firsthand glimpse at the camaraderie, danger, and satisfactions of service. A substantial epilogue, occasioned by the fiftieth anniversary of V-J Day in 1995, adds poignancy to a volume that eminent military historian John Keegan described as "one of the great personal memoirs of the Second World War."
Educational charity promoting the reading, writing, teaching & study of Scotland's literature & languages, past & present. https://t.co/zYhepbuFMG
“Quartered Safe Out Here … provides insight into what it takes an individual to survive, both (with luck) physically and, more importantly, ethically” – retired @AustralianArmy officer Jason Thomas on George MacDonald Fraser’s WW2 memoirs 3/5 https://t.co/iJOKPgDVZz
"Fraser is an excellent popular historian." --Time Magazine
"Quartered Safe Out Here, an account of his experiences as a soldier in the Burma Campaign, is as vivid, compassionate, and courageous a picture of small-scale fighting as any the Second World War produced." --National Review
"George MacDonald Fraser writes superbly." --Washington Post