A Long Walk Home
One Woman's Story of Kidnap, Hostage, Loss - and Survival
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4.3 • 37 Ratings
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- £5.49
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- £5.49
Publisher Description
This is the story of how, over a period of one hundred and ninety-two days, I was torn away from the life I knew and loved, and dragged down to the depths of despair; of how I endured enforced isolation and near-starvation at the hands of Somali pirates; and of how I made a choice to survive by any and all means that I could muster.
In September 2011 Judith Tebbutt and her husband David set out on an adventurous holiday to Kenya. A couple for thirty-three years, they had first met in Zambia: Africa had played a major part in their life together. After a joyous week on safari in the Masai Mara, they flew on to a beach resort forty kilometres south of Somalia. And there, in the early hours of 11 September, tragedy struck them.
Judith was torn away from David by a band of armed pirates, dragged over sea and land to a village in the arid heart of lawless Somalia, and there held hostage in a squalid room, a ransom on her head. There, too, she learned the terrible truth that the responsibility of securing her release now rested with her son Ollie.
But though she was isolated, intimidated and near-starved, Judith resolved to survive - walking endless circuits of her nine-foot prison, trying to make her captors see her as a human being, keeping her faith at all times in Ollie.
Powerful, moving and at times quite devastating, this is Judith Tebbutt's story in her own words. It is a memoir of the life she shared with her beloved husband, an unflinching account of the ordeal that overturned her world, and a testament to the inner resilience and familial love that sustained her through captivity.
There is nothing so bad in life as to have no hope - to believe you have been defeated, to give in to that. Now that I found myself in confinement, four thousand miles from home under a hostile sky, I would not accept that fate for myself.
Customer Reviews
A Long Walk Home
I keep picking up this book and reading parts of it again. I find it hard to believe what Judith had to go through on her own and the discomfort she had to endure, not least the fact that she was given so little food with zero nourishment. How inhuman is that! My heart went out to her and I can only admire that she survived at all. I am glad the story had a "happy" ending of sorts, as I spent some holiday time on Manda Island, which was where the French lady who died was taken hostage from. Their but for the grace of God go I......
Touching
A truly touching account of a very difficult time in the life of this remarkable lady. Whilst we cannot fully appreciate or imagine what Judith went though this gives us a really good account. So well written I couldn't put it down. I'm so glad that the after release events were also written about . I hope this has helped Judith . I hugely recommend
A long walk home
What a honour to read Judith's story a incredible woman .....you must read this !