The autobiography of Diana Fynn
Diana Fynn’s autobiography is a moving account of her quest to make sense of life’s spiritual experiences, as she played her part in some of the most turbulent events of the 20th century.
As secretary to Roger Hollis (later suspected of being the Fifth Man in the MI5 spy-ring) she lived through the London Blitz at the nerve centre of British Intelligence.
Later in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) she set up a home for orphaned African children and, because of her reaction against white racism and political moves towards apartheid, she helped to form the multi-racial Centre Party and edited its anti-government newspaper.
Through all this, often captured in her own vivid poetry, Diana’s sensitivity to spiritual and psychic experience enables her to take the reader on a rare exploration into what it means to be human.
250 pages and 26 photographs