Mark Bridgeman The Nearly Man is the true, yet almost unbelievable, story
of one man's incredible life, beginning in rural Scotland in
the reign of Queen Victoria, and ending on the west coast
of Canada in the 1970s. In one of the 20th century's great
untold stories we travel with Francis Metcalfe on an
amazing journey from the great estates of Scotland to the
battlefields of Flanders, and the trenches of the Somme.
His associations with the soon-to-be famous and his
brushes with death were followed by his heroics in the ice
fields of Arctic Russia, wasted years in post-war London,
and a narrow escape from being murdered by Sinn Féin in
Ireland.
After a spell in prison for fraud, Metcalfe became a fugitive from Scottish Law as he engineered a daring
escape to France, while the attention of the police was diverted. After hiding in Paris during the 1920s,
among the 'Lost Generation' of writers, Metcalfe was arrested at gunpoint and thrown in France's most
notorious jail. In his own words, Metcalfe tells the astounding story of his flight from justice, his subsequent
trial, imprisonment, followed by release, his second escape from the police, his capture and his decision to
start a new life in Canada. . . . only to become embroiled in Communist riots, the hardship of the depression,
the infamous 'Ottawa Trek', and the impending war.
The Nearly Man tells the story of one man's adventures through some of the last century's lesser- known
conflicts, and his encounters with the famous thinkers, writers and soldiers of his time. But it also shows how
his exploits impacted the people around him. Francis Metcalfe almost became one of Britain's notable war
heroes, poets, writers, adventurers, businessmen and criminals. If Metcalfe had succeeded, he would
doubtless be immortalised in history. Instead, his incredible adventures through some of history's forgotten
events had become lost in time, until his story was painstakingly unearthed for this book.
Genres:
256 Pages