Dial 999!
By (Author) Les Pringle
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Corgi Books
15th August 2011
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: science, technology and medicine
Emergency services
362.188092
Paperback
400
Width 127mm, Height 198mm, Spine 24mm
273g
The heart-warming true life adventures of an ambulance driver in 1970s Britain This is a re-issue of Blue Nights and Long Nights ISBN 9780552158527. Card-playing corpses, unfaithful husbands and 'flying' ladies - life as an ambulance driver in the 1970s was certainly varied ... At the age of twenty-three, Les Pringle decided to escape from office life, broaden his horizons and become an ambulance driver. Little did he realize how broad those horizons would turn out to be. Filled with warmth and humour, Dial 999! takes us back to a time when lonely old ladies could call 999 and have a cup of tea waiting when the drivers turned up for a chat; when learning to drive the ambulance meant going out for one test drive and managing not to hit a pedestrian; and every day brought a glimpse into other people's lives. Gripping, poignant and darkly funny, Dial 999!is an affectionate, warm-hearted look at a world gone by.
A great read. I loved every page -- Jack Sheffield
It's the most wonderfully written book... I do recommend [it] I really do -- Libby Purves, Midweek, Radio 4
His fascinating insight will make you laugh [and] cry... * Yours *
Les' writing is so good that, even though I know the material inside out, I was still drawn to read more - he's a very engaging a writer... I cannot recommend it enough -- Tom Reynolds, author of "Blood, Sweat and Tea"
Although born in Easington County Durham, Les Pringle spent his first eight years in Ratho, south-west of Edinburgh. His father's subsequent career moves led Les and his family on a whistle-stop tour of England before eventually settling in Birmingham when Les was in his mid-teens. He joined Birmingham's Metropolitan Ambulance Service in 1977 for little more reason than it seemed a good idea at the time. That good idea led to three, unbroken decades of round the clock emergency work. He is the holder of the Queen's Medal for Long and Exemplary Service. Les has two children and still lives in Birmingham with his wife, Marie-Madeleine.