The first European to enter and leave these areas alive, Winnington met a slave-owner who assessed his value at five silver ingots ('Your age is against you, but as a curiosity you would fetch a decent price'), a head-hunter who a fortnight earlier killed a man in order to improve his own rice harvest and a sorcerer struggling against the modern medicines sapping his authority and livelihood. Meeting recently released slaves was a scoop of which most journalists can only dream - 'Nobody will ever again be able to see them as I saw them' - and Winnington's account of their struggle to come to terms with new-found freedom is unforgettable.
The Slaves of the Cool Mountains: Travels Among Head-Hunters and Slave-Owners in South-West China
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Book Details
Author(s)Alan Winnington
PublisherBirlinn Ltd
ISBN / ASIN1897959583
ISBN-139781897959589
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank3,413,325
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
Beijing, 1956: foreign correspondent Alan Winnington heard reports of slaves being freed in the mountains of south-west China. The following year he travelled to Yunnan province and spent several months with the head-hunting Wa and the slave-owning Norsu and Jingpaw. From that journey was born The Slaves of the Cool Mountains, which Neal Ascherson has called 'one of the classics of modern English travel writing'.