Description
Book Synopsis‘She showed great courage and commitment in reporting from Burma and exemplified my belief that the best journalists are also the nicest’ –
Aung San Suu Kyi ‘One of the most distinguished television journalists of her generation’ –
Huw Edwards ‘Brilliant and indefatigable’ –
Jeremy Bowen ‘She had something you call moral courage and it rubbed off on others’ –
David Aaronovitch ‘She set the standard for bravery in many of the world’s nastiest places’ –
John Fisher Burns, New York Times ‘She went to dangerous places to give a voice to people who otherwise would not be heard’ –
Tony Hall, BBC Director General In 1973, Sue Lloyd-Roberts joined ITN as a news trainee and went on to be one of the UK's first video-journalists to report from the b
Trade Review‘It is a testament to a woman whose
talent and courage shine from every page that this book is
a powerful reminder of how far we still have to go before equality is achieved’ * Sunday Times *
‘An important book’ * Times Literary Supplement *
‘A
tough but necessary read and sadly useful if you ever need reminding how equality is still far beyond our reach’ * Stylist *
‘Go read
The War on Women, by BBC reporter Sue Lloyd-Roberts . . .
she was fearless and morally driven.’ -- Yasmin Alibhai-Brown * International Business Times *