The Narrow Smile: A Journey back to the North-West Frontier - Peter Mayne

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9781780602097.jpg

The Narrow Smile: A Journey back to the North-West Frontier - Peter Mayne

£14.99

Published 5th October

The Narrow Smile (first published in 1955) is a portrait of the Pathan and their highland home on either side of the Pakistan-Afghan frontier.

Peter Mayne grew up in India, and later spent four years on the Northwest Frontier during the Second World War. Mayne delighted in the company of these fierce but hospitable highlanders, who were as hard as the mountains that assured their independence but democratic to the point that no man admitted the right of another to lead him.

In 1953, Mayne took a long journey to see what had become of his old friends in the high, flower-filled valleys on the roof of the world.  But peace had always been a relative concept on this frontier, where Afghanistan was now eyeing Pashtun lands in a new iteration of the Great Game. Mayne’s misadventures are sometimes serious, often very funny, and at all times compassionate.

Eland also publish Peter Mayne’s A Year in Marrakesh.

‘one of the best pieces of writing about a remote part of the world ... I have seldom enjoyed a travel book so much.’ The Observer

‘quietly observant, a man of patience and receptivity in our strident times ... and no less exceptional in his humanity.’TLS

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The Narrow Smile
ISBN: 978-1-78060-209-7

Format: 272pp demi pb
Place: Pakistan, Afghanistan, North-West Frontier

Author Biography

Peter Mayne (1908-1979) was an English travel writer, revered for his two books on Pakistan and one on Morocco. He wrote with a rare incisive wit and a perfect memory for dialogue. Born in Wiltshire, Peter first travelled to India aged two. He worked as a liaison officer with the Pathan tribes of the North West Frontier for the RAF, witnessing what happened in Kashmir after the British forces evacuated. He then served the  government of Pakistan as Deputy Secretary to the Ministry of Refugees and Rehabilitation. Resigning after the tension of Partition had eased, Peter acquired a flat in Athens in the late ’60s, which served as a postal address, but he was always a traveller living in Spain, Istanbul and Cairo – his brilliant social life fuelled by his vivacity and fluency with languages.