'The Gateway to Gandamak'
Geoff Quartermaine Bastin
Writes books as G.J. Quartermaine. Geopolitics, History ... works in International Agribusiness
Book 1 – Birth Pangs
Do not start something lightly, problems will arise at the start of anything – I Ching (3, Chun)
A Traveler lecturing in India, remembers the colorful, colonial, and war-torn history of the British Raj. His visit to Gwalior Fort in Central India reminds him of the storming of its three-hundred-foot walls, the Maratha and Sikh Wars, and vicious fighting during the Indian War of Independence (“The Mutiny”). His research focuses on the role of brave junior officers in defeating an insurgency despite the incompetence of the commanders and the failure of intelligence and information gathering.
Investigating a shocking environmental disaster, the Traveler meets an Englishman, James Quartermaine, whose family has served in India during the Raj. Intrigued by James’ story, the Traveler comes to England to find out more about the Quartermaines. He learns that a man named “Quatremain” was part of the invasion of Saxon England by the Normans in 1066 and fought in the violent Battle of Hastings. Two families, the Mountfordes and the Quartermaines, have been entwined since the Norman conquest of England. Quartermaines have fought for the East India Company, and one escapes death at the hands of the Afghans in the horrific defeat of the British Army at Gandamak.
James’ grandfather sees another massacre by British troops at Amritsar and plays a role in the early development of Signals Intelligence. James' mother, Barbara Mountforde, works at Bletchley Park on the Ultra (Enigma) program in World War 2 with the iconic Alan Turing. The Traveler narrates Turing’s story and how information science and codebreaking in the war bring humanity forward into the modern Computer Era. Alan Turing’s life and, importantly, his mysterious death – suicide or murder – are seen through the eyes of Barbara and her friend, Turing’s erstwhile fiancé, as a tipping point of computing science and artificial intelligence. James himself is drawn into the dangerous world of British counterterrorism.
Book 2 - Through the Gateway
There are rebels. The noble man is unable to do anything. The great ones leave, and the lesser ones come – I Ching (12, P’i)
James Quartermaine tells the Traveler about his past. He joined the British Army and goes to Northern Ireland as the Troubles turn from civil resistance to insurgency and then a terrorist war. Manipulated by a psychopathic commander, a series of traumatic and shaming events force him to consider who he is. Searching for new meaning to his life, James leaves the military and finds work in Papua New Guinea, but he takes no action when a colleague wins a murderous game of wits. Older, more cynical, disillusioned with humanitarian efforts that go wrong, JQ returns to Oxford University where new and fascinating windows open into the exploration of man-machine civilization – Turing’s “thinking machines” and how simulation and game theories develop through AI.
Disturbed by what he has learned, unable to settle in academia, distressed James abandons his family and finds himself in Bangkok and in love with a beautiful singer. Middle-aged now, confused about the world and his life, guilty and ashamed about his behavior, post 9/11 he serves in Afghanistan using his analytical skills from Northern Ireland linked to ideas simulation technology to combat the Taliban.
After a traumatic attack in Helmand, James reads about the bravery of a British sergeant in the First Afghan War. He is determined to redeem himself, to do something right, and writes an investigative report about the war situation. He is lured to the battlefield of Gandamak where nearly two hundred years ago the 44th Regiment of Foot took its last stand against other enemies waiting.
Bio
The author served in the British Army as an engineer, was educated at Oxford University as an economist, and did post-graduate work on artificial intelligence affiliated with the University of British Columbia. He was a manager for a multinational agribusiness corporation investing in emerging economies before establishing his own consulting company in Hong Kong. His later career includes work for USAID, the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, and other development agencies. He has served as a senior development advisor, including for “stabilization” in a COIN environment, in many of today's’ conflict zones including Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Somaliland, and Yemen. He resides in Thailand.
There is a coincidental, but still weird, connection between the name "Quartermaine" (French for "Four Hands") and the four-armed Hindu Deity, Lord Vishnu. His avatar, Lord Krishna, has a walk-on part in the book.
I think the humans are a sick race... what the fuck are they fighting each other for...? Money, power, well-being, safety...? Sick and mentally deranged... there is no heroism in killing anyone or anything...
Managing Director at ALCIS Holdings Ltd
4 年Hi Geoff - great book idea. Check this out ref Gandamak and the retreat from Kabul: https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/f0ec69f7a5164e3f9ad16631e64191bb
Writes books as G.J. Quartermaine. Geopolitics, History ... works in International Agribusiness
4 年'The Gateway to Gandamak' alludes to the heroic last stand of the British 44th Regiment of Foot in Afghanistan on 13th January 1842 during the First Afghan War. The book traces a part-fact, part-fiction family history from the Norman Conquest of Anglo-Saxon England in 1066 to the present day. It includes episodes during the Raj, codebreaking in World War 2, counter-terrorism in Northern Ireland in the 1970s, and current conflicts.
Writes books as G.J. Quartermaine. Geopolitics, History ... works in International Agribusiness
4 年I hope the book will be published by the end of May. We are editing the lengthy text (over 170,000 words). This is a tale I have always wanted to tell, and our friend COVID has provided me with the opportunity during my enforced stay in one place. There's another book coming too. Watch this space. Thanks.