Essay on Nepal – Past and Present

Essay on Nepal – Past and Present

£20.00

By Sam Cowan

Sam Cowan first visited Nepal in 1966 when he trekked for two months in east and west Nepal. At the time he was on a three-year tour as a junior officer with Queen’s Gurkha Signals in Borneo, Malaya and Hong Kong. During a long and distinguished career, until his retirement as a four-star general in 2002, he performed numerous staff and command jobs culminating in the successive appointments of Inspector General of Army Training, Quartermaster General, and Chief of Defence Logistics. In 1989, he became Colonel of Queen’s Gurkha Signals and a trustee of the Gurkha Welfare Trust (GWT). In 1994, he was appointed Colonel Commandant of the Brigade of Gurkhas, the titular Head of Gurkhas in the British Army, an appointment which also carried with it the responsibility of being Chairman of the GWT. His annual visits to Nepal as Colonel Commandant included eight official audiences with the reigning monarchs to deliver a report on the Brigade of Gurkhas. Since 1989, he has done a further 30-plus treks. Sam Cowan’s unique essays are essential for the specialist and highly entertaining for the generalist. His analyses of the battles of the Maoist insurgency, or ‘People’s War’, were pathbreaking when originally published and remain deeply insightful. What he has to say on frontiers, human rights abuses, corruption in high places, and the misjudgements and foibles of Nepal’s rulers, makes for compulsive reading.

Each book is personelly signed by General Cowan.

From a review by Gordon Corrigan
“A superb book. Well and lucidly written, even the most knowledgeable can learn something about Nepal that he did not know, and this reviewer certainly did. The breadth of subjects covered is enormous. An excellent book and a cracking good read.”

100% of sales from this book goes to The Gurkha Museum Trust.

© The Gurkha Museum Trust Winchester - Registered Charity Number 1169920 (formerly 272426)