John Keay (born 1941) is an English journalist and author specialising in popular histories of India and the Far East, often with a particular focus on their colonisation and exploration by Europeans.
John Keay was born in Devon, England, to parents of Scottish origin. He studied at Ampleforth College in York before going on to read Modern History at Magdalen College, Oxford. Among his teachers at Oxford were the historian A. J. P. Taylor and the future playwright Alan Bennett. In 1965 he visited India for the first time. He went to Kashmir for a fortnight's trout-fishing and liked it so much that he returned the following year, this time for six months. It was during his second stay in Kashmir that Keay decided upon writing as a career. He joined the staff of The Economist and returned to India several times as its political correspondent. He also started contributing stories to BBC Radio.
In 1971 he gave up his correspondent's job in order to write his first book, Into India, which was published in 1973. Keay followed it with two volumes about the European exploration of the Western Himalayas in the 19th century: When Men and Mountains Meet (1977) and The Gilgit Game (1979). These two books were later combined into a single-volume paperback by John Murray.
Words and Music by Alan O'Day
Well you are such an easy evil
Such a sensuous sin
Sometimes I don't know where I'm going
'Till I've been taken in
Such an easy evil
Such a promise of fun
Sometimes I don't know what I'm doing
Till I'm done, you're a sneaky one
Here she comes now touching me, calling my name again
Here I go now, like a moth to a flame
I'm a sucker for you baby
Such an easy evil
Such a sensuous sin
Sometimes I don't know where I'm going
"Till I've been taken in
I've been taken in