Bertil and Hseng Noung Lintner, and their baby daughter, born enroute, spent one and a half years traveling through northern and eastern Burma, from 1985-87. Throughout their account, they describe, with rare and deep insight, the struggle by northern Burma’s ethnic groups against brutal Burmese army rule, and record the decline and fall of the Communist Party of Burma. During their incredibly arduous 2,275 kilometre trek, mostly on foot and at times in great danger, they recorded the history of a forgotten 40-year war, an account which otherwise would never have been committed to paper in such rich detail. Land of Jade further provides poignant descriptions of the efforts of simple ethnic tribes-people to forge lives amid the larger struggles of political antagonists, drug lords, foreign interlopers and assorted other opportunists—a situation that remains painfully relevant to many in diverse locations to the present day.
List Chapter or Page:
Page 1Page 2Page 3Page 4Page 5Page 6Page 7Page 8Page 9Page 10Page 11Page 12Page 13Page 14Page 15Page 16Page 17Page 18Page 19Page 20 View More >>- You Can Lead a Horse to Water (Proverbial Crime Mysteries Book 3)
- Maybe Someday
- Water Shall Refuse Them
- The Remarkable Journey of Prince Jen
- Dark Overlord’s Wife (The Children Of The Gods Paranormal Romance Series Book 39)
- Aunt Gertrude's Red Hot Christmas Beau: Christmas Belles, Book 6
- Magic Unleashed (Delphine Rising Book 2)
- Memory Lane