Career
Many of his novels, considered exotic, are about his experiences as leading foreign correspondent for the Daily Mail. He had two brothers: Kenneth, a banker, and Anthony Barber, Baron Barber. Most notably he reported from Morocco, where he was stabbed five times.
In October 1956, Barber survived a gunshot wound to the head by a Soviet sentry in Hungary during the Hungarian revolution.
A car crash ended his career as journalist. He then began writing novels: he became a best selling novelist in his seventies with his first novel, Tanamera.
Cities (1951) (with Rupert Croft-Cooke)
Fires of Spring (1952)
Strangers in the Sun (1955)
A Handful of Ashes: A Personal Testament of the Battle of Budapest (1957)
The White Desert (1958)
Distant Places (1959)
The Flight of the Dalai Lama (1960)
Life with Titina (1961)
Adventures At Both Poles (1963)
Conversations with Painters (1964)
The Black Hole of Calcutta (1965)
Let"s Visit the United States of America (1967)
Sinister Twilight: The Fall And Rise Again of Singapore (1968)
From the Land of Lost Content (1969)
The War of the Running Dogs: How Malaya Defeated the Communist Guerrillas, 1948-1960 (1971)
The Sultans (1973)
Lords of the Golden Horn: From Suleiman the Magnificent to Kamal Ataturk (1973)
Seven Days of Freedom: Hungarian Uprising, 1956 (1974)
The Week France Fell: June 10–16, 1940 (1976)
The Natives Were Friendly So We Stayed the Night (1977)
The Singapore Story (1978)
Fall of Shanghai: Communist Takeover in 1949 (1979)
"Tanamera" was filmed as a television serial in 1989 as Tanamera – Lion of Singapore. Tanamera - Lion of Singapore at the Internet Movie Database
"The Other Side of Paradise" was filmed for television in 1992.
The Other Side of Paradise at the Internet Movie Database.