The Last Overland : 21,000 km, 23 Countries and One Very Old Land Rover
(Autor) Alex BescobyIn 1955, Attenborough, then a young TV producer, was approached by six recent university graduates determined to drive the entire length of 'Eurasia', from London to Singapore. It was the unclimbed Everest of motoring - many had tried, none had succeeded. Sensing this time might be different, Attenborough gave the expedition enough film reel to cover their attempt. The 19,000-mile journey completed by Tim Slessor and the team captivated a nation emerging from postwar austerity. Tim's book, The First Overland, soon became the bible of the overlanding religion. Inspired by the First Overland, Alex made contact with now eighty-six-year-old Tim and together they planned an epic recreation of the original trip, this time from Singapore to London. Their goal was to complete the legendary journey started more than sixty years ago in the original Land Rover. In awe of the unstoppable Tim, and haunted by his own grandfather's declining health, Alex and his team soon find themselves battling rough roads, breakdowns and Oxford's constantly leaky roof to discover a world changed for the better - and worse - since the first expedition.
Alex Bescoby
Alex Bescoby is a British author and historian known for his critically acclaimed book "The Lost Executioner: A Journey to the Heart of the Killing Fields". His writing style is characterized by meticulous research and vivid storytelling. Bescoby's work sheds light on the atrocities of the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia.