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Books > Travel > Travel writing > Classic travel writing
Travel was a way of life for the Austrian poet and novelist Rainer
Maria Rilke, and it was integral to his work. Between 1897 and 1920
he visited Venice ten times. The city has inspired countless
writers and artists, but Rilke was both enthralled and provoked by
it, as eager to see and explore the city's deserted shipyards and
back alleys as the iconic sights of St Mark's and the Doge's
Palace. He would walk the city alone, staying in simple guesthouses
or the grand palaces of his patrons. Birgit Haustedt guides readers
through the city in the poet's footsteps, showing us the sights
through Rilke's eyes.
"A whimsical cross between a fairy tale and a travelogue. . . This
version includes beautiful illustrated collages by the Italian
artist Livia Signorini." -"T, The New York Times Style Magazine"
"It is no wonder that Signorini was moved to assemble collages that
embrace the span of time that clearly resonated with Dickens as he
explored Italy. Images from antiquarian books cozy up to Photoshop
embellishments like enlarged rigatoni, made even more impressive by
the gatefold pages across which these compositions spread,
complementing Dickens's running theme of the moment being
everything and nothing, honoring the poignancy of stone, water,
light, and shadow." - "Imprint," "Print" Magazine
"Pictures from Italy," one of Charles Dickens' earlier works, is a
whimsical foray into the twin worlds of travel and the imagination.
Italian artist Livia Signorini plays with Dickens' sense of place,
memory, and politics. The result is a brilliant contemporary
dialogue with his work that renews our sense of his enduring
vision. An extraordinary work that is as much about travel writing
as it is about Dickens' journey to Italy itself, this handsome
volume features 11 full-color gate folds.
US Grade Level Equivalent: 7-8+
US Guided Reading Level: Z
Lexile(R) Measure: 1200L
HOW THE GOLDEN AGE OF TRANSATLANTIC TRAVEL BETWEEN THE WARS
TRANSFORMED WOMEN'S LIVES ACROSS ALL CLASSES - A VIVID CROSS
SECTION OF LIFE ON-BOARD THE ICONIC OCEAN LINERS FROM BELOW DECKS
TO THE CAPTAIN'S TABLE. 'In this riveting slice of social history,
Sian Evans does a brilliant job of describing the unexpected
textures of life at sea...By deep diving into the archives, Sian
Evans has discovered a watery in-between world where the usual
rules didn't quite apply and a spirited woman could get further
than she ever would on dry land. - Mail on Sunday Migrants and
millionairesses, refugees and aristocrats all looking for a way to
improve their lives. After WW1 a world of opportunity was opening
up for women ... Before convenient air travel, transatlantic travel
was the province of the great ocean liners and never more so than
in the glory days of the interwar years. It was an extraordinary
undertaking made by many women. Some traveled for leisure, some for
work; others to find a new life, marriage, to reinvent themselves
or find new opportunities. Their stories have remained largely
untold - until now. Maiden Voyages is a fascinating portrait of
these women, and their lives on board magnificent ocean liners as
they sailed between the old and the new worlds. The ocean liner was
a microcosm of contemporary society, divided by class: from the
luxury of the upper deck, playground for the rich and famous, to
the cramped conditions of steerage or third class travel. These
iconic liners were filled with women of all ages, classes and
backgrounds: celebrities and refugees, migrants and
millionairesses, aristocrats and crew members. Full of incredible
gossip, stories and intrigue, Maiden Voyages has a diverse cast of
inspiring women - from A-listers like Josephine Baker, a dancer
from St Louis who found fame in Paris, Marlene Dietrich and Wallis
Simpson, Violet 'the unsinkable' Jessop, a crew member who survived
the sinking of the Titanic, and entrepreneur Sibyl Colefax, a
pioneering interior designer. Whichever direction they were
travelling, whatever hopes they entertained, they were all under
the spell of life at sea, a spell which would only break when they
went ashore. Maiden Voyages is a compelling and highly entertaining
account of life on board: part dream factory, part place of work,
independence and escape - always moving.
The eighteenth century witnessed the publication of an
unprecedented number of voyages and travels, genuine and fictional.
Within a genre distinguished by its diversity, curiosity, and
experimental impulses, Katrina O'Loughlin investigates not just how
women in the eighteenth century experienced travel, but also how
travel writing facilitated their participation in literary and
political culture. She canvases a range of accounts by intrepid
women, including Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's Turkish Embassy
Letters, Lady Craven's Journey through the Crimea to
Constantinople, Eliza Justice's A Voyage to Russia, and Anna Maria
Falconbridge's Narrative of Two Voyages to the River Sierra Leone.
Moving from Ottoman courts to theatres of war, O'Loughlin shows how
gender frames access to people and spaces outside Enlightenment and
Romantic Britain, and how travel provides women with a powerful
cultural form for re-imagining their place in the world.
Samuel Johnson and James Boswell spent the autumn of 1773 touring
the Highlands and the Western Islands of Scotland. Both kept
detailed notes of their impressions and later published separate
accounts of their journey together. The account of their great tour
is one of the finest pieces of travel writing ever produced: it is
a magnificent historical document and also a portrait of two
extraordinary personalities. In the vivid prose of theses two
famous men of letters, the Highlands and the Western Islands spring
to life. The juxtaposition of the two very different accounts
creates an unsurpassed portrait of a society which was utterly
alien to the Europe of the Enlightenment, and straining on the
brink of calamitous change. This great masterpiece, entertaining,
profound, and marvellously readable is also our last portrait of a
lost age and people.
Focusing upon three previously unpublished accounts of youthful
English travellers in Western Europe (in contrast to the renowned
but maturely retrospective memoirs of other seventeenth-century
figures such as John Evelyn), this study reassesses the early
origins of the cultural phenomenon known as the 'Grand Tour'.
Usually denoted primarily as a post-Restoration and
eighteenth-century activity, the basis of the long term English
fascination with the 'Grand Tour' was firmly rooted in the
mid-Tudor and early-Stuart periods. Such travels were usually
prompted by one of three reasons: the practical needs of diplomacy,
the aesthetic allure of cultural tourism, and the expediencies of
political or religious exile. The outbreak of the English Civil War
during the late-1640s acted as a powerful stimulus to this kind of
travel for male members of both royalist and parliamentarian
families, as a means of distancing them from the social upheavals
back home as well as broadening their intellectual horizons. The
extensive editorial introductions to this publication of the
experiences of three young Englishmen also consider how their
travel records have survived in a variety of literary forms,
including personal diaries (Montagu), family letters (Hammond) and
formal prose records (Maynard's travels were written up by his
servant, Robert Moody), and how these texts should now be
interpreted not in isolation but alongside the diverse collections
of prints, engravings, curiosities, coins and antiquities assembled
by such travellers.
Open boat cruising has never been more popular, in the doing or the
reading of it; magazines, websites, associations and events around
the world attest to this, and of course the countless sailors who
just 'get on with it' in their own unassuming manner. Two such,
some fifty years ago, long before today's explosion of activity,
were Ken Duxbury and his wife B; Ken's three books recounting their
adventures in the eighteen-foot Drascombe Lugger 'Lugworm'
delighted many on their first appearance, yet they became
unavailable for years. 'Lugworm on the Loose' describes how Ken and
B quit the 'rat race' and explored the Greek islands under sail.
'Lugworm Homeward Bound' recounts their voyage home from Greece to
England. 'Lugworm Island Hopping' has Ken and B exploring the
Scilly Isles and the Hebrides. The light touch of Ken's writing
belies the sheer ambition, resourcefulness and seamanship which
infuse these exploits. And beyond pure sailing narrative, his books
convey the unique engagement with land and people which is achieved
by approaching under sail in a small boat.
From the moment Karen Blixen arrived in Kenya in 1914 to manage a coffee plantation, her heart belonged to Africa. Drawn to the intense colours and ravishing landscapes, Karen Blixen spent her happiest years on the farm and her experiences and friendships with the people around her are vividly recalled in these memoirs. Out of Africa is the story of a remarkable and unconventional woman and of a way of life that has vanished for ever.
At the age of 23, three years after attending the coronation of Haile Selassie, Thesiger made his first expedition into the country of the murderous Danakil tribe. Since then he has traversed the Empty Quarter twice, spending five years among the Bedu, followed by several years living as no Westerner had in the strange world of the Marshmen of Iraq.
Later he made many mountain journeys in the awesome ranges of the Karakorams, the Hindu Kush, Ladakh and Chitral. After these varied and often dangerous adventures among fast-disappearing cultures, Thesiger settled down to spend over twenty years living mostly among the pastoral Samburu in Northern Kenya, until 1994 when he finally returned to England permanently.
These experiences have, over the years, provided rich material for writings which express a romantic but austere vision, and for exquisite photographs which capture the spirit of a bygone era. This book contains extracts from the eight books Thesiger published to great acclaim between 1959 and 1998, most notably Arabian Sands, Marsh Arabs and The Life of My Choice.
Alexander von Humboldt visited the tropics of the New World between 1799 and 1804. On his return he wrote this book, a classic work of travel that is also one of the great products of Enlightenment natural science. In his lifetime, Humboldt was described as "next to Napoleon, the most famous man in Europe". An admirer of the French Revolution, a Neptunist, an anti-slavist, a lover of Rousseau and Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, and a close friend of Goethe (whom he resembled), he was also a profound influence upon Darwin and the course of Victorian science, as well as upon the proponents of new world independence.
In the second half of the nineteenth century, accounts of the
journey down the Nile became increasingly common. This narrative by
William John Loftie (1839-1911), who wrote prolifically on travel,
art, architecture and history, was published in 1879. (His A
Century of Bibles is also reissued in the Cambridge Library
Collection.) Loftie spent in total about 15 months in the Nile
valley over several seasons, and justifies his book by the rate of
archaeological discoveries: 'books published even three years ago
are already behind the times'. He gives details of his journeys to
and from Egypt, and of visits to the famous sites, but, unusually,
he takes notice of the current political and economic state of
Egypt, and is trenchant in some of his criticisms. He also goes off
the beaten tourist track, hiring donkeys to make excursions away
from the river, rather than travelling only by boat.
In 1894, Martin Conway became the first man to walk the Alps 'from
end to end' when he completed a 1,000-mile journey from the Col de
Tende in Italy to the summit of the Ankogel in Austria. On a
midsummer's morning, nearly 120 years later, Simon Thompson
followed in his footsteps, setting out to explore both the
mountains and the man. A charming rogue who led a 'fantastically
eventful' life, according to The Times, Conway was a climber and
pioneering explorer of the Himalaya, Spitsbergen, the Andes and
Patagonia; a serial pursuer of American heiresses; an historian,
collector and Slade Professor of Fine Art at Cambridge; a company
director and stock market promoter of dubious gold mines and
non-existent rubber forests; the founder of the Imperial War
Museum; the first foreigner to see the Russian crown jewels after
the revolution; a successful journalist and author of over thirty
books; a liberal politician; and a conservative MP. Shortly before
he died, he was created 1st Baron Conway of Allington. Conway was a
clubbable man who counted Winston Churchill, David Lloyd George,
Henry James, Rudyard Kipling, J. P. Morgan, John Ruskin, Mark Twain
and Edward Whymper among his many friends and acquaintances. An
imperialist, a dreamer, a liar and a cheat, Conway 'walked in
sunshine all his life', according to contemporaries, but he was
also a restless, discontented man, constantly searching for meaning
and purpose in his life. And that search that led him back, time
and time again, to the Alps. In A Long Walk with Lord Conway, Simon
Thompson retraces Conway's long journey over the peaks, passes and
glaciers of the Alps and rediscovers the life of a complex and
remarkable English adventurer.
"Inspirational" - The Daily Mail "Sarah Sands has written about
stillness with an eloquence that fizzes with vitality and wit. This
wonderful book charts a journey to some of the most beautiful and
tranquil places on earth, and introduces us to people whose inner
peace is a balm for our troubled times. I loved every page of it."
- Nicholas Hytner Suffering from information overload, unable to
sleep, Sarah Sands, former editor of the BBC's Today programme, has
tried many different strategies to de-stress... only to reject them
because, as she says, all too often they threaten to become an
exercise in self-absorption. Inspired by the ruins of an ancient
Cistercian abbey at the bottom of her Norfolk garden, she begins to
research the lives of the monks who once resided there, and
realises how much we may have to learn from monasticism. Renouncing
the world, monks and nuns have acquired a hidden knowledge of how
to live: they labour, they learn and they acquire 'the interior
silence'. This book is a quest for that hidden knowledge - a
pilgrimage to ten monasteries round the world. From a Coptic desert
community in Egypt to a retreat in the Japanese mountains, we
follow Sands as she identifies the common characteristics of
monastic life and the wisdoms to be learned from them; and as she
discovers, behind the cloistered walls, a clarity of mind and an
unexpected capacity for solitude which enable her, after years of
insomnia, to experience that elusive, dreamless sleep.
'German military figures had a certain terrifying glamour,' wrote
Patrick Leigh Fermor, recalling views about Germany during the
First World War. When, he asked, had the bristling general replaced
the 'philosophers and composers and bandsmen and peasants and
students drinking and singing in harmony?' The enchanted forest,
symbol of Romantic idealism and traditional folktales, had given
way to other images of Germany and Germans. By following Leigh
Fermor, and over eighty other British and North American literary
visitors to Germany, this original anthology shows how different
generations of English-speakers have depicted this country.
Starting in the sixteenth century with some of the earliest travel
accounts in English, Brian Melican presents a wide range of writing
about, or set in, Germany. Letters from Johnsonians such as Boswell
and Garrick and the Romantic poets Coleridge and Wordsworth; the
journals of Herman Melville and Henry James; ante bellum fiction by
authors such as D. H. Lawrence and Ford Madox Ford: all of this and
more reveals an oft-forgotten richness in encounters with Germany
before the horrors of the twentieth century. Work by Christopher
Isherwood, Stephen Spender and wartime reporters through the 1940s
exposes the country's darkest moments, while sometimes surprising
takes on the conflict emerge from authors inside Germany with
unique perspectives such as Christabel Bielenberg and Michael
Howard. Post-war writing ranges from the spy fiction of Len
Deighton to the writers who dissected post-Nazi Germany. The
diversity of writing about Germany today encompasses light-hearted
accounts and more searching passages taken from an eclectic
selection of authors. Recorded and imagined images of Germany have
changed dramatically across the centuries. Yet views on many of its
features especially its cities and rivers, customs and cuisine have
often remained constant. This anthology, with extensive
introductions and annotations, offers a range of opinions, both
typical and atypical of their time, and invites readers to venture
beyond the usual discussion about this country at the very heart of
Europe.
INTRODUCED BY WILLIAM ATKINS, author of The Immeasurable World 'I
am merely an eccentric, a dreamer who wishes to live far from the
civilized world, as a free nomad.' Isabelle Eberhardt's writing
chronicles, in passionate prose, her travels in French colonial
North Africa at the turn of the 20th century. Often dressed in male
clothing and assuming a man's name, she worked as a war
correspondent, married a Muslim non-commissioned officer, converted
to Islam and survived an assassination attempt, all before dying in
a flash flood at the age of 27. Desert Soul brings together her
'Wanderings' and 'The Daily Journals', detailing the ecstatic highs
and the depressive lows of her short but unique and extraordinary
life.
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A Hero of Our Time
(Paperback)
Mikhail Lermontov; Translated by Nicolas Pasternak Slater; Introduction by Andrew Kahn; Notes by Andrew Kahn
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'After all that - how, you might wonder, could one not become a
fatalist?' Lermontov's hero, Pechorin, is a young army officer
posted to the Caucasus, where his adventures - amorous and reckless
- do nothing to alleviate his boredom and cynicism. World-weary and
self-destructive, Pechorin is alienated from those around him yet
he is full of passion and romantic ardour, sensitive as well as
arrogant. His complex, contradictory character dominates A Hero of
Our Time, the first great Russian novel, in which the intricate
narrative unfolds episodically, transporting the reader from the
breathtaking terrain of the Caucasus to the genteel surroundings of
spa resorts. Told in an engaging yet pointedly ironic style, the
story expresses Lermontov's own estrangement from the stifling
conventions of bourgeois society and the oppression of Russian
autocracy, but it also captures a longing for freedom through acts
of love and bravery. This new edition also includes Pushkin's
Journey to Arzrum, in which Pushkin describes his own experiences
of Russia's military campaigns in the Caucasus and which provides a
fascinating counterpoint to Lermontov's novel. ABOUT THE SERIES:
For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the
widest range of literature from around the globe. Each affordable
volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the
most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features,
including expert introductions by leading authorities, helpful
notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further
study, and much more.
Published posthumously in 1930, Stendhal's travel notes on his 1838
journey to southern France contain descriptions of cities such as
Bordeaux, Toulouse and Marseilles, peppered with numerous personal
digressions, anecdotes and cultural musings. Both an addition to
the Stendhalian canon and a pioneering work of the travel-writing
genre, Travels in the South of France provides an illuminating
perspective on this popular region and the phenomenon of tourism in
general.
Richard Twiss' "A Tour in Ireland in 1775", published in the
following year, was one of the most controversial books of its
period. It was based on his experiences of a five-month stay in the
country. It enraged the Irish public through its unflattering
representation of Ireland and its inhabitants. Since its
publication it has been widely quoted as a contemporary source for
Irish life, though generally cited in a negative context. Although
a bestseller in its day it has not been reprinted since. This new
edition includes the full collection of poems written in opposition
to the book, together with contemporary illustrations of the sites
and views visited by Twiss during his tour.
Following his election to Parliament, George Nathaniel Curzon
(1859-1925) embarked on extensive travels and research in Asia,
spending several months in Persia in 1889-90. Later viceroy of
India, Curzon believed that growing Russian influence in Asia
threatened Britain's interests, and that Persia was an important
buffer state. Highly regarded upon publication in 1892, this
illustrated two-volume work is a mix of history, geography, travel
narrative, and social and political analysis. Intended to educate
readers at home as to Persia's strategic significance, the work
reflects its author's staunch support for British imperialism.
Volume 1 describes Curzon's journey to Tehran, offering
observations on the situation in the provinces which bordered
Russian-controlled territory. Curzon then gives an overview of
Persian institutions, including the monarchy, government, and the
army. His Problems of the Far East (1894) is also reissued in this
series.
Originally published in 1919, this book contains extracts from
diaries kept by Arthur Everett Shipley, the Vice-Chancellor of the
University of Cambridge, on a trip to the United States from
September to December of 1918 as part of the British University
Mission. The text is written in a vivid and readable style,
preserving Shipley's recollections of touring America immediately
before and after the end of World War One. This book will be of
value to anyone with an interest in Anglo-American relations.
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