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Forget You Had a Daughter

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Parámetros

  • 272 páginas
  • 10 horas de lectura

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"Forget You Had a Daughter" is the extraordinary story of an ordinary British woman who made a mistake that changed the rest of her life. Sandra Gregory seemed to have the perfect life in Bangkok--until illness, unemployment and political unrest turned it into a nightmare. Desperate to get home by any means possible, she agreed to smuggle an addict's personal supply of heroin. She didn't even make it onto the plane. In this remarkably candid memoir, Sandra Gregory tells the full story of the events leading up to her arrest, the horrific conditions in Lard Yao prison, her trial in a language she didn't understand and how it feels to be sentenced to death. Sandra finally resumed her journey home some four and a half years later, when she was transferred to the British prison system and had to adapt to a new, yet equally harsh, regime. Following relentless campaigning by her parents--who refused to forget they had a daughter--she was pardoned by the King of Thailand and released in 2000.

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Forget You Had a Daughter, Sandra Gregory, Michael Tierney

Idioma
Publicado en
2002
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Idioma
Inglés
Formato
Tapa blanda
Páginas
272
ISBN10
1904132154
ISBN13
9781904132158
Serie
Primera publicación
2002
Título original
Forget You Had a Daughter
Calificación
3,95 de 5
Descripción
"Forget You Had a Daughter" is the extraordinary story of an ordinary British woman who made a mistake that changed the rest of her life. Sandra Gregory seemed to have the perfect life in Bangkok--until illness, unemployment and political unrest turned it into a nightmare. Desperate to get home by any means possible, she agreed to smuggle an addict's personal supply of heroin. She didn't even make it onto the plane. In this remarkably candid memoir, Sandra Gregory tells the full story of the events leading up to her arrest, the horrific conditions in Lard Yao prison, her trial in a language she didn't understand and how it feels to be sentenced to death. Sandra finally resumed her journey home some four and a half years later, when she was transferred to the British prison system and had to adapt to a new, yet equally harsh, regime. Following relentless campaigning by her parents--who refused to forget they had a daughter--she was pardoned by the King of Thailand and released in 2000.