This is a travel story with a difference. It’s about what it’s like to be married to a war reporter and to have one for a dad. It’s about being five-years old and wondering why Daddy’s boots are covered with mud from a mass grave and who was in it.
One of the most powerful memoirs of persecution ever written. Denise Affonço recounts how her comfortable life in Phnom Penh was torn apart when the Khmer Rouge seized power in Cambodia in April 1975.
A poignant account of the life of Abebe Bikila, first black African to win a gold medal in the Olympics, hero of the African renaissance, and ultimately, tragic victim of fate.
Imagine cheering your national football team as your country falls apart or running roadblocks manned by terrorists on the way to hospital as your wife is about to give birth… Red Zone is an extraordinary account of life in Iraq.
This classic account of the Spanish civil war is re-published for the first time since 1936. It chronicles not only the atrocities of war but also the human face of the conflict.
This is the story of the thousands of foreigners who fought for Franco, only to be left out of the history books. A fascinating insight into the hidden armies of the Spanish Civil War, and a poignant snapshot of a divided continent on the brink of war.
Set in the barren tribelands of Southern Sudan against the backdrop of the fifty
year civil war that raged against the government in Khartoum, this stunning
novel is the post-traumatic account of a naive young doctor, Maria, who is
thrust into a world whose
Reportage Press is a new publishing house specialising in books on foreign affairs or set in foreign countries; non-fiction, fiction, essays, travel books, old travel memoirs, or just books written from a stranger’s view.