After gaining a degree in Anthropology, Sophie went into television production directing her first documentary for Channel 4 when driving from London to Johannesburg. Having produced an INSET series for BBC Education, she set up wildlife films in Botswana and a BLUE PETER exploration of South Africa. She was filming in Kenya when her Uncle Tony first introduced her to Makorongo. He had a panic attack when a group of Japanese tourists walked behind his chair and explained himself by telling Sophie about his miraculous extraction from a Japanese prisoner of war camp. Her aunt was concerned that his extraordinary story would be lost forever and urged her to write it up, filling her in on the details. Makorongo is long-dead, but his son was keen for his story to be told and provided a few notes. Due to Operation Meeting House's bombing of Tokyo not enough documentation exists to write a biography, but Hans's family agreed it would be good to see a novel based on this untold tale from WWII.
Sophie's family moved from the Malay States to Tanganyika in 1919, with a resolve to grow pyrethrum and 'save the world from malaria'. She emigrated to southern Africa where she spent twelve years working as a wildlife artist between film contracts, travelling though twenty-one African countries. After founding an HIV/AIDs project, she became a trustee of The Waterberg Trust and is currently raising money to provide African schoolgirls with eco-sanitary pads. She married an Englishman and now lives on the south coast of the UK.
Comments
Not usually a big fan of historical fiction & romance, but...
I quite enjoyed this one!
Great writing...it has the…
Great writing...it has the ring of authenticity about it.
Congratulations on being a…
Congratulations on being a PTA Book Award finalist. The story has an interesting premise. Smiles//jb