Killing My Own Snakes: A Memoir

Author:   Ann Leslie
Publisher:   Pan Macmillan
Edition:   Unabridged edition
ISBN:  

9780230015937


Pages:   464
Publication Date:   19 September 2008
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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Killing My Own Snakes: A Memoir


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Overview

"The doyenne of women reporters, she has been a star writer for the ""Daily Mail"" for over three decades and regularly appears as a witty and forthright contributor to numerous television and radio programs (including ""Question Time"" and ""Any Questions""). She has reported from over seventy countries, sauntering confidently through wars and civil disorders (clad in full makeup and false eyelashes), bringing back reports which have won her numerous awards. But Leslie's life is every bit as remarkable as her career. Born in north-west India, the strongest influence on her early life was an illiterate Pashtun bearer, who saved her life during Partition.Sent to a distant hill-station boarding school at the age of four, she would later graduate from Oxford. After university she began her career in Manchester on the ""Daily Express"", where she was regarded with suspicion and even hostility for being both educated and female. A year later she moved to Fleet Street and was given a column headlined: 'She's young, she's provocative, and she's only 22'. She later specialized in show business: notable encounters followed involving stars like Steve McQueen, Georges Balanchine, David Niven, Tom Jones, John Cassavetes, James Mason, Marc Bolan and Salvador Dali. Despite knowing nothing about sport she developed a strong rapport with Pele and Mohammed Ali (especially after she hit him on the jaw to gain his attention). In the recent ""Reuters/Press Gazette"" launch of the Newspaper Hall of Fame she was listed as one of the forty most influential journalists in the last forty years and was described as 'the most versatile reporter ever'."

Full Product Details

Author:   Ann Leslie
Publisher:   Pan Macmillan
Imprint:   Macmillan
Edition:   Unabridged edition
Dimensions:   Width: 15.30cm , Height: 4.00cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.779kg
ISBN:  

9780230015937


ISBN 10:   023001593
Pages:   464
Publication Date:   19 September 2008
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

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Reviews

"A smashing tale of history and handbags and the role of the bra in a danger zone * The Independent on Sunday * Dame Ann Leslie is one of the greatest journalists of her generation. This is a masterpiece – always self-deprecating, always exciting, always witty -- A.N. Wilson A vivid, absorbing book which, like Leslie's best journalism, conveys what it's like to live through wars, civil conflicts, oppression and historic change * The Guardian * A marvellous memoir of great insight and wit from one of Britain's most formidable and accomplished journalists -- Andrew Neil This is a cracking read! -- Paul O'Grady If you want to know what journalism is really like, read her book: it's wonderful -- Andrew Marr Ann Leslie has always seen the key details and written them down with a passion, tension and wit which remind us why journalists call assignments a ""good story"" -- Mark Lawson A memoir that is not only entertaining but could serve as a vade mecum to recent world history * The Scotsman * You can't help being enthralled by this most extraordinary story. Leslie describes encounters with pin-ups and prime ministers, debs and dictators -- Liberty Shami Chakrabarti Ann Leslie is quite simply one of the most fearless, talented and witty journalists in Britain today -- Gavin Esler A Daily Mail veteran who writes like a salsa-dancing viper * Daily Echo * Ann Leslie emerges from this memoir exactly as you might have expected: shrewd, hard and crafty, but also loyal, truthful and brave * Times Literary Supplement *"


Author Information

Ann Leslie, the doyenne of women reporters, was a star writer for the Daily Mail for over three decades and regularly appeared as a witty and forthright contributor to numerous television and radio programmes (including 'Question Time' and 'Any Questions'). She was created a Dame of the British Empire in the 2007 New Year's Honours List. She reported from over seventy countries, sauntering confidently through wars and civil disorders (clad in full makeup and false eyelashes), and bringing back reports which have won her numerous awards. When the Media Society in 1997 gave her their Lifetime Achievement Award the citation noted that she was only the third person to receive the honour: ‘the two previous winners were Sir Alistair Cooke and Sir David Attenborough’. It praised her ‘special ability to give readers personality, style and substance in every article she writes.’ Leslie’s life was every bit as remarkable as her career. Born in north-west India, the strongest influence on her early life was her beloved Yah Mohammed, an illiterate Pashtun bearer, who saved her life during Partition. Her mother sent her to a distant hill-station boarding school at the age of four. After graduating from Oxford she began her career in Manchester in the Sixties on the Daily Express, where she was regarded with suspicion and even hostility for being both educated and female. A year later she moved to Fleet Street and was given a column headlined: ‘She’s young, she’s provocative, and she’s only 22.' She later specialised in show business: notable encounters followed involving stars like Steve McQueen, Georges Balanchine, David Niven, Tom Jones, John Cassavetes, James Mason, Marc Bolan and Salvador Dali. Despite knowing nothing about sport she developed a strong rapport with Pele and Mohammed Ali (especially after she hit him on the jaw to gain his attention). In the Reuters/Press Gazette launch of the Newspaper Hall of Fame she was listed as one of the forty most influential journalists in the last forty years. In David Randall’s book The Great Reporters (celebrating the 13 greatest British and American journalists of all time), the author profiled Ann Leslie as ‘the most versatile reporter ever.'

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