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The Independent: ‘My Week’ by Andy McNab

My Week: Andy McNab
Saturday, 14 November 2009

The author and former member of the SAS is on a new mission meeting audiences of infantrymen – and passing on to them the joys of reading

Monday
I’m on a promotional tour for my new book and I’m due to give a talk at RAF Lossiemouth, up in the north of Inverness, but it was all a bit Planes, Trains and Automobiles today because we never actually get there. We take a flight from Gatwick but we get stuck in Aberdeen airport as there’s too much fog. We end up getting trains and taxis to Edinburgh and we lose the whole day.

Tuesday
We go to Catterick today, which has the biggest military garrison in Europe. I’m giving a talk to the Infantry Training Centre where everybody does the 26-week basic infantry training course. I talk to them mainly about the benefits of getting an education. Even now, on average an infantry recruit has the reading age of an 11-year-old. I tell them all the war stories about my time in the SAS and the glamorous bits about writing books and getting involved in films. But I really try to encourage them all to continue with their education while they’re training and take advantage of the opportunities that are there within the army. I hang out with the new recruits. They try and get me to do an assault course or arm-wrestle them; all that sort of business but it’s good fun. A lot of these guys will be going to Afghanistan next year. It’s not time for Britain to leave there yet. Whether we like it, we’re there and to pull out now would affect the situation here. We have to try to get the police and the Afghan army up to a credible level of training and competence which is going to be hard. Everybody wants to get the job done and get out but it has to work; otherwise we’re back to square one.

Wednesday
I go to Wakefield to talk to the West Yorkshire Police. I’m a patron of Help for Heroes so they have an event for Remembrance Day. I talk about my career and but ultimately it’s all to raise money. People are really behind the charity, which is great, and we manage to get lots of money out of policemen.

Thursday
I’m involved in an initiative called Quick Reads which re-engage people who haven’t read for a while, or find reading difficult, with a range of books which can be read in about an hour and a half. I go to three schools around Liverpool and talk about books and how reading has helped me. When I joined the army at 16, the first book I read was a Janet and John book which is designed for children. But I felt proud at having finished a book, even if it had just a couple of sentences a page.

Friday
I drive to Sheffield today to sign lots of my latest book, Exit Wound. It follows Nick Stone again, but this time he’s trying to make some money for himself rather than saving the world! I then go to Nottingham for another event to encourage reading. I always tell them the same thing: pick up a book – what’s the worst that could happen?

Source: The Independent

Comments

Comment from angel_22
Time: Monday 16 November, 2009, 16: 28

He’s been a busy boy, hasn’t he! :-D

And thanks very much for all the updates over the last week here at GML!

Comment from Anna-Karin
Time: Tuesday 17 November, 2009, 07: 13

Seems like a really good week..

Comment from andy
Time: Tuesday 17 November, 2009, 12: 32

I don’t suppose anyone knows where Andy Mcnab is this comming week? Or has he finished his book signing tour?

He was down the road from me last week and I wanted to get my book signed but I couldn’t get out of work!

Comment from Lynn
Time: Tuesday 17 November, 2009, 17: 53

OUCH Andy! ‘down the road’ and you couldn’t get there…?? that sounds terrible. Sorry to say though that Andy M doesn’t inform us of his whereabouts. He should though! ;-)

Comment from andy
Time: Tuesday 17 November, 2009, 20: 33

Lynn: Yep I’m gutted! I travel all over the UK for my job but I live in Leeds and he was at Waterstones (which is 10 mins walk from my flat), I planned to go there but I got a call last minute and was diverted to London :(

I’ll keep my eyes peeled, I want to ask him if they will ever release any more unabridged audio books.

I have all of them, even Crisis Four which they don’t do anymore unabridged; Clive Mantle = Nick Stone. Because I travel a lot the audio books really help on boring train rides/motorways.

Comment from Gary Curtis
Time: Thursday 19 November, 2009, 07: 46

Keeps himself busy huh? Interesting to see the amount of travelling he does.

Comment from Lynn
Time: Thursday 19 November, 2009, 10: 06

Andy, I think Andy M might not even know what will be published in audio, allthough the audio will be sold by GoSpoken also, perhaps you could e-mail them? There’s no point in asking his publisher Transworld, since they don’t hold the rights to the audiobooks.

Comment from andy
Time: Friday 20 November, 2009, 05: 47

Hi Lynn,

Yeh your probably right, I just thought be might have an opinion on the matter of the unabridged ones. I emailed Random House Audiobooks – they hold the rights to the audiobooks. They told me there were no plans for an unabridged book of Brute force but didn’t know why they stopped with the unabridged ones or if there would be any in future.

It’s probably a financial reason, I imagine it costs a lot more to have the voice artist read the whole 12 hour book, I just feel the abridged ones leave too much info out – the info that makes the books so good in the first place.

Cheers,

Andy

Comment from Gary Curtis
Time: Friday 20 November, 2009, 11: 16

I have listened to all the audio books on iTunes and I always find them great and a good way to pass the working day. However, recently I download a unabridged book from someone else I now I wish the Nick Stone novels were the same.

It’s true they miss out some great parts when cut.

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