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James Leasor (1923–2007)

Author of Green Beach

61+ Works 922 Members 13 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

James Leasor was educated at The City of London School and Oriel College, Oxford. In World War II he was commissioned into the Royal Berkshire Regiment and posted to the 1st Lincolns in Burma and India, where he served for three and a half years
Disambiguation Notice:

Also wrote as Andrew MacAllan

Series

Works by James Leasor

Green Beach (1975) 133 copies, 2 reviews
The Sea Wolves (1978) 81 copies
Code Name Nimrod (1981) 72 copies, 2 reviews
The One That Got Away (1956) 69 copies, 1 review
The Plague and the Fire (1961) 58 copies, 1 review
Passport to Oblivion (1960) 36 copies
Mandarin Gold (1973) 26 copies
Passport to Peril (1977) 25 copies
Passport in Suspense (1969) 24 copies
Who Killed Sir Harry Oakes? (1983) 24 copies
Follow the Drum (1972) 22 copies, 2 reviews
Fanfare (1992) 20 copies
The millionth chance (1957) — Author — 19 copies
Passport for a Pilgrim (1968) 18 copies
Succession (1989) 17 copies, 1 review
Never Had a Spanner on Her (1970) 17 copies
The Chinese Widow (1975) 12 copies
Host of Extras (1973) 11 copies
Rudolf Hess - The Uninvited Envoy (1961) 11 copies, 1 review
The marine from Mandalay (1988) 10 copies
Love-All (1971) 9 copies
Love and the Land Beyond (1979) 8 copies
Jade Gate (1976) 8 copies
Diamond Hard (1991) 8 copies
Open Secret (1982) 8 copies, 1 review
Frozen Assets (1989) 7 copies, 1 review
Week of Love (1971) 7 copies
Ship of Gold (1984) 6 copies
Generation (1990) 6 copies
Rhodes & Barnato: Architects of Empire (1997) 5 copies, 1 review
Spylight (1967) 4 copies
Love Down Under (1993) 4 copies
Conspiracy of Silence (1960) 4 copies
Speculator (1993) 2 copies
PASSI PYHIINVAELTAJALLE (1972) 2 copies
NTR : Nothing to report (2016) 2 copies
Misión en Pourville (1977) 1 copy
The Strong Delusion (1951) 1 copy
Drama i Algarve (1983) 1 copy
Tank of Serpents (1987) 1 copy
Ontsnapt! 1 copy
Traders (1994) 1 copy

Associated Works

The London Encyclopedia (1983) — Contributor, some editions — 426 copies, 2 reviews
Secrets & Spies: Behind the Scenes Stories of World War II (1964) — Contributor — 205 copies, 2 reviews
Great Spy Stories from Fiction (1969) — Contributor, some editions — 89 copies
The Sea Wolves [1980 film] (1980) — Original book — 63 copies, 1 review
The Rigby File (1989) — Contributor — 11 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Leasor, James
Other names
MacAllan, Andrew
Halstock, Max
Birthdate
1923-12-10
Date of death
2007-09-10
Gender
male
Education
City of London School
University of Oxford (Oriel College)
Nationality
England
UK
Birthplace
Erith, Kent, England, UK
Place of death
Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
Disambiguation notice
Also wrote as Andrew MacAllan
Associated Place (for map)
Erith, Kent, England, UK

Members

Reviews

14 reviews
Follow the Drum by James Leasor is what I call a thumping good read. Originally published in 1972 this historical adventure focuses on the 1857 Indian Sepoy Mutiny. I was a little doubtful about this book at first, but once he dropped any pretence at romance, his straightforward military drama was excellent. The author obviously did intensive research in order to place the various regiments along with their commanders and staff at their locations before, during and immediately after the show more mutiny. He also was able to highlight some of the key mutineers and their reasons for inciting the rebellion.

Politically, India at that time was being run by the East India Company whose main objective was to strip the country and fatten their pockets. Although the British Army was present, the bulk of the military was made up of soldiers who served the Company first. Lack of communications, corrupt officials, and the company’s policy of controlling the native rulers by honouring some and stripping the rights of others helped in developing the rumours that stirred the sepoys into a killing frenzy. Once the mutiny was underway the corruption and jealousy between the Company and the Army meant that there was no clear leader to bring the mutiny to a timely end. There was more than enough blame to go around and eventually it took months for the British to regain control.

The authors’ description of military life and the actual campaign to subdue the rebellion made for an exciting read. As there were atrocities on both sides, there is extreme violence that might be off-putting for some readers. Personally I found this a well told tale that was both informative and entertaining.
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Serviceable British thriller published in the '80s. The author seems to look just like Inspector Morse, down to the classic car. I gave it up as too shallow and sentimental and of its time, but would concede that it is yet fairly clever. The title is a pun, and there is a semi-plausible historical background. Seems like it was the very last in the series.
This is my favourite James Leasor book. Mr. L was a novelist, who would fit somewhere between Bernard Cornwell and George MacDonald Fraser. He gave us blood and thunder in the India Mutiny, in this book, and it's fun. The only jarring note for me was a scene where people cram their pockets with cartridges for their percussion cap revolvers. The paper cartridges wouldn't have stood up to that treatment, and the revolvers would have jammed quickly if loaded with them. But I quibble, and you show more will have fun with this book, if you are like me. show less
The inside story of the Dieppe Raid in August 1942, which taught the allies many invaluable lessons for the D-Day invasion in 1944. It is also the exceptional story of Jack Nissenthal, a young jewish radar expert who was tasked with finding intelligence about the state of German radar developments, in particular their Freya radar station at Plourville, near Dieppe. Jack was protected by a cadre of the South Saskatchewan Regiment (SSR) who had orders he couldn't be allowed to be captured show more alive by the Germans because of his deep knowledge of British radar. Against all odds, Jack survived whilst many of the SSR perished and after the war set up up a successful electronics business, firstly in South Africa and in his later years in Canada, where I was privileged to meet him. This edition is an Amazon paperback reprint and as such has a few typos which don't detract from the powerful story. show less

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Statistics

Works
61
Also by
5
Members
922
Popularity
#27,829
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
13
ISBNs
184
Languages
8
Favorited
1

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