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Flying from Shangri-La

What it was really like in the “Worst Place to be a Pilot”

Stuck in a boring office job, Matt wasn’t happy. Suffering with debilitating anxiety issues, he could feel his life wasting away. Something had to change. One flying lesson was all it took to set him on a journey to escape the mundane and embark on an adventure to a land unknown…

Matt’s life went from answering emails to flying the most dangerous routes in one of the world’s last frontiers: Papua. Plane crashes, tropical diseases, tribal villages and jagged, jungle covered mountains were the new normal.

If you enjoyed the hit Channel 4 TV series, Worst Place to be a Pilot, then you need to read Flying from Shangri-La. It’s informative, funny, tragic and proof that real adventure still exists.

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to leave your normal life behind and risk everything to fulfil a dream?

This isn’t an ordinary memoir and features:

  • QR codes at the end of each chapter linking the reader through to more photos and videos
  • Packed with hand drawn maps of the places Matt flew from
  • Two full colour plate sections containing over 50 photos from Matt’s adventures*

*Hardback only.


Buying options

As an indie author, I have had to self publish and so I don’t have a big publishing house behind me. I have tried my best to make my book available worldwide and in as many places as possible. If you are not in the UK and find a local stockist, please get in touch so I can add the link for other readers to use.

The Kindle version is available worldwide:

And I can ship worldwide from my website:

I’ve also found this UK based bookstore that offers very good prices for international shipping and is cheaper than Amazon: Booksplease

CountryHardback
United KingdomDirect from author
Amazon UK
Waterstones
WHSmith
Direct from publisher
U.S.A. & CanadaDirect from author
Amazon.com
Australia & New ZealandDirect from author
Amazon AU
The Nile NZ
BelgiumDirect from author
Amazon BE
FranceDirect from author
Amazon FR
Germany & SwitzerlandDirect from author
Amazon DE
IrelandDirect from author
Amazon UK
Easons
ItalyDirect from author
Amazon IT
NetherlandsDirect from author
Amazon NL
PolandDirect from author
Amazon PL
PortugalDirect from author N/A due to customs issues
Amazon ES
ScandinaviaDirect from author
Amazon SE
SpainDirect from author
Amazon ES
Rest of worldDirect from author


Almost exactly three years since leaving the UK, I was about to fulfil a dream of flying one of the world’s best bush planes in the most extreme and challenging environments this planet can offer. Papua was where all the best flying happened and the most crazy stories were told. The last three years had been a warm up, and I was just getting started.

Extract from Flying from Shangri-La by Matt Dearden

10 thoughts on “Flying from Shangri-La”

  1. Living vicariously through you! I’m currently doing my PPL and this is a dream! My Auntie Sallie told me to check your website out, can’t wait for the release

  2. Captain John Edwards

    Congratulations on your survival….I flew the Hawker Avro 748 lease demonstrator out of East Jarva and around Eastern Indonesia airstrips in 1971.
    I can appreciate what you went through….

  3. B. Victoria Høyvik

    Very much looking forward to read this Matt!! Awesome to see your ever continued aviation-drive. Fondly remember our dreamy talks of them high powered taildraggers, and especially the part where you sparkled with the go-getter-goal of flying the Susi Porter operations!
    Congratulations on publishing this book Capt. Dearden.

  4. Absolutely love your posts!

    I am a Swiss expatriate living in Indonesia since 1990. I grew up admiring the aviatic capabilities of “The Porter” since its dramatically staged introduction back in 1958.

    Dramatically staged you ask?

    Imagine Swiss TV, still transmitting in black and white.

    A hangar door slowly opens. At Stans, Switzerland, situated on Lake Lucerne. But rather than facing the wide-open space over the lake, the hangar door is facing the steep cliff of the the foot of the “Stanserhorn”, a peak adjacent to the iconic mount Pilatus.

    Now imagine the distant roar of a (still avgas, carburetor induced) aircraft engine. Still nothing. When the aircraft finally appeared, it was half way in the air thru the hangar gate, pulling up facing the mountain cliff, then fly up against it in a move that appeared more like a mountain goat racing up the cliff rather than an aircraft flying along it.

    To us “blasé” Swiss kids back then this was nothing more than a clever stunt the “Central Swiss” would pull. Little would we know that shortly after this public stunt Pilatus would introduce a “new generation” power unit from the US called “Turbo prop”, dramatically improving the Porters mounting climbing abilities. In that version, the “Porter” would achieve global recognition and admiration.

    Pilatus stopped producing this little gem years ago, mostly due to cheaper versions in aviation. Most recently unmanned drones. Yet it lives on as an unmatched “veteran”.

    A “veteran” myself, it is on the top of my bucket list to one day fly in it. I wish to thank enormously devoted “Pilatus” enthusiasts, pilots and accomplished entrepreneurs such as Susi Pudjastuti and Matt Dearden for keeping this icon aloft and and alive!

  5. Really looking forward to reading this Matt. Since I saw you on the tv it’s something that I hoped would make it to print and your story has.

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