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A LOG ACROSS THE ROAD:

PART II: A STATE OF EMERGENCY

1971

From ATA page:

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It is 1952, the height of the Malayan emergency. As ten men travel through the terrorist-infested jungle, one of them asks the question: "What were you doing ten years ago?" This story answers that question.

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Against a backdrop of the Second World War and the uneasy peace that followed, the pattern of their lives emerges. One man has known and loved the wives of two of his companions; one has fought with the terrorists he now pursues. After years of bitterness and hardship, another is about to find some happiness; a fourth can only face the past through a haze of alcohol.

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But across those ten years their lives have touched. Gradually they are drawn together in a brilliantly complex pattern up to the day of their fateful journey through the jungle.

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From blurb:

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MALAYA, 1952 . . .

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He lay in bed, listening to the rain. He was content, content to be away from urban life, to be back near the jungle. Then he heard a light scratching on his bedroom door. Salmah came in. She carried a small lamp and there was jasmine in her hair. The soft light showed her flawless skin, the lovely limbs, the gleam of her long black hair.

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She stood for a moment motionless, saying nothing. Then she slowly put out a hand to touch him . . .

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"Using the Bridge of San Luis Rey technique, Sheila Ross presents a rich tapestry of human life and emotions."

--London Evening News

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A Log Across the Road: A State of Emergency
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A LOG ACROSS THE ROAD: PART II: A STATE OF EMERGENCY: Work
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