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A nine-month forced march through the fierce terrain of Colombia ensued but the author makes little of this and we can only guess his feelings when he is told 'You pay, you go free'. But this is not a one sided story. David Hutchinson incorporates his family's side of the story; their efforts to contact him and the FARC: a whole picture of the kidnap is created.

Interspersed with this are pen-portraits of the various guerrilleros with whom he comes into contact and mini-biographies of other captives and the limited occupations of the captives such as chess and wildlife watching.

When he is finally allowed to make a phone call to his home, there is the constant fear that it will be traced. The whole group could then be attacked by the air force, as did happen. This is not just kidnapping; this is war. The air force flies overhead and the army constantly track the guerrilla. They run, they fight and they die, it is a constant battle for survival. Interest is added by giving details of the political and social background and of how the kidnappings first started. Half the kidnaps in the world happen in Colombia.