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Books > Travel > Travel writing > General
"Fresh and diverting, informative and topical without being slight
or ephemeral. This supremely well-edited combination of current
affairs, journalism, commentary, and fun facts is perfect for our
pause-button moment." -Australian Financial Review, Best Books of
the Year Fully illustrated, The Passenger collects the best new
writing, photography, art and reportage from around the world. IN
THIS VOLUME: Growing Uncertainty in California's Central Valley by
Anna Wiener * What Does It Mean to Be a Solution? by Vanessa Hua *
Shadows in the Valley by Francisco Cantu. Plus: direct democracy
and unsustainable development, the rise of the Land Back movement,
LA's cultural renaissance in the face of rampant gentrification,
visions of the future, the death of the Californian Dream, the
burning of Paradise and much more . . . "Wildfire season had
already begun, and, as the car pitched along the road through Kings
Canyon, I tried to tamp down a feeling like dread. In California,
where the effects of global warming are pervasive and unsubtle,
spending time in the forest always makes me feel unspeakably lucky
and dizzy with remorse. Families in masks stomped through the Giant
Forest to pose for photographs in front of General Sherman, a
275-foot-tall tree. Children licked ice-cream bars by the visitor
center. In the parking lot, some of the oldest living trees in the
world shaded eight-seat SUVs: Kia Tellurides, Chevy Tahoes, Toyota
Sequoias." -From "Growing Uncertainty in California's Central
Valley" by Anna Wiener
In the critically acclaimed Desert Divers and Exterminate All the
Brutes, Sven Lindqvist travelled through Africa's deserts and
unearthed the cruelty of colonialism. Now he has done the same for
Australia. Lindqvist travels through the south of the country,
lyrically describing its landscape, flora and fauna and geology,
while also telling the history of the country and revealing the
shocking treatment of its Aboriginal peoples. He catalogues some
truly shocking abuses, such as the rounding up of Aborigine women
for transportation to the chillingly named 'Isle of the Dead' for
inappropriate and often fatal syphilis treatment, and the extensive
forced separation of 'half-blood' children from their families to
squalid prison-like camps. Stretching from the formation of the
Australian continent 600 million years ago to the 2002 hunger
strikes in the Woomera detention camp, Terra Nullius leaves us with
a strong sense of Australia as a piece of earth, steeped in
geological and tragic human history.
As read on BBC Radio 4 'Book of the Week' Shortlisted for the
Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year Award Longlisted for the
RSL Ondaatje Prize 'Sherman's is a special book. Every sentence,
every thought she has, every question she asks, every detail she
notices, offers something. The Bells of Old Tokyo is a gift . . .
It is a masterpiece.' - Spectator For over 300 years, Japan closed
itself to outsiders, developing a remarkable and unique culture.
During its period of isolation, the inhabitants of the city of Edo,
later known as Tokyo, relied on its public bells to tell the time.
In her remarkable book, Anna Sherman tells of her search for the
bells of Edo, exploring the city of Tokyo and its inhabitants and
the individual and particular relationship of Japanese culture -
and the Japanese language - to time, tradition, memory,
impermanence and history. Through Sherman's journeys around the
city and her friendship with the owner of a small, exquisite cafe,
who elevates the making and drinking of coffee to an art-form, The
Bells of Old Tokyo presents a series of hauntingly memorable voices
in the labyrinth that is the metropolis of the Japanese capital: An
aristocrat plays in the sea of ashes left by the Allied firebombing
of 1945. A scientist builds the most accurate clock in the world, a
clock that will not lose a second in five billion years. A sculptor
eats his father's ashes while the head of the house of Tokugawa
reflects on the destruction of his grandfather's city ('A lost
thing is lost. To chase it leads to darkness'). The result is a
book that not only engages with the striking otherness of Japanese
culture like no other, but that also marks the arrival of a
dazzling new writer as she presents an absorbing and alluring
meditation on life through an exploration of a great city and its
people.
In 2020, Christiaan De Beukelaer spent 150 days covering 14,000
nautical miles aboard the schooner Avontuur, a hundred-year-old
sailing vessel that transports cargo across the Atlantic Ocean.
Embarking in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, he wanted to understand the
realities of a little-known alternative to the shipping industry on
which our global economy relies, and which contributes more carbon
emissions than aviation. What started as a three-week stint of
fieldwork aboard the ship turned into a five-month journey, as the
COVID-19 pandemic forced all borders shut while crossing the ocean,
preventing the crew from stepping ashore for months on end. Trade
winds engagingly recounts De Beukelaer's life-changing personal
odyssey and the complex journey the shipping industry is on to cut
its carbon emissions. The Avontuur's mission remains crucial as
ever: the shipping industry urgently needs to stop using fossil
fuels, starting today. If we can't swiftly decarbonise shipping, we
can't solve the climate crisis. -- .
American lawyer and man of letters describes two trips through the
U.S. taken twenty years apart, observing New England and the
Mid-Atlantic regions, mostly, later traveling into the South and
Midwest.
Shortlisted for the The Great Outdoors Awards - Outdoor Book of the
Year 2020 Shortlisted for the Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain
Literature 2020 There are strange relics hidden across Scotland's
landscape: forgotten places that are touchstones to incredible
stories and past lives which still resonate today. Yet why are so
many of these 'wild histories' unnoticed and overlooked? And what
can they tell us about our own modern identity? From the high
mountain passes of an ancient droving route to a desolate moorland
graveyard, from uninhabited post-industrial islands and Clearance
villages to caves explored by early climbers and the mysterious
strongholds of Christian missionaries, Patrick Baker makes a series
of journeys on foot and by paddle. Along the way, he encounters
Neolithic settlements, bizarre World War Two structures, evidence
of illicit whisky production, sacred wells and Viking burial
grounds. Combining a rich fusion of travelogue and historical
narrative, he threads themes of geology, natural and social
history, literature, and industry from the places he visits,
discovering connections between people and place more powerful than
can be imagined.
As America's finest writer, Mark Twain could make entertaining
reading -- and great literature -- out of almost anything. Here we
have a book begun out of adversity. The great novelist, satirist,
and public celebrity was broke, ruined by various ill-advised
investment schemes; but, being a man of honor on a public stage, he
resolved to pay off every cent of his crushing debt. He did so by
going on a two-year, round-the-world lecture tour, where he spoke
to sold-out houses in Europe, India, and Australia, all the while
gathering material for yet another best-selling travel book, filled
with his trademark wit and brilliant observation. Even after more
than a century this book is still a must-read. Whatever has been
forgotten about the times and places Twain describes he has
recreated for us, vividly and forever.
Since 9/11 the reader has been inundated with academic volumes
about radical Islam, the geo-political alliances of Pakistan and
the identity of the Taliban. What has been lacking is Travels in a
Dervish Cloak, an affectionate, hashish-scented travel book, full
of humour and delight, written by a young Irish foreign
correspondent living on his wits, on the contacts from his
grandmother s address book and with a kidney given to him by his
brother. Others might have conserved this gift of a life-saving
kidney by living a sober and quiet life, but it had the opposite
affect on Isambard Wilkinson, who took to the adventurous life of a
Daily Telegraph foreign correspondent like a cat assured of nine
lives. His rich and wonderfully intimate picture of Pakistan
describes the country in all its exuberant, colourful, contemporary
glory. It s a place where past empires, be they Mughal or Raj,
continue to shine like old gold beneath the chaotic jigsaw of
Baluch, Punjabi, Sindi and Pashtun peoples, not to mention
warlords, hereditary saints, bandit landlords, smugglers and
party-mad socialites. The only way to understand the contradictions
is to plunge into the riot of differences, and to come out
grinning.
A devout Quaker and baker travels through the Mid-Atlantic and New
England, with a few short jaunts into Southern states; he is mostly
concerned with religious matters and politics as they relate to
religious belief (namely, slavery).
COLONSAY: ONE OF THE HEBRIDES. ITS PLANTS: THEIR LOCAL NAMES AND
USES, LEGENDS, RUINS, AND PLACE-NAMES- GAELIC NAMES OF BIRDS,
FISHES, ETC. CLIMATE, GEOLOGICAL FORMATION, ETC. by MURDOCH M C
NEILL. First publshed in 1910. - PREFACE: A COLLECTION of the
plants of his native island was begun by the writer in 1903, during
a period of convalescence, and was continued as a recreation, from
time to time, as occasion offered. In 1908 the idea of making use
of the material accumulated and arranging it for publication was
conceived, and to put it into effect a final endeavour was made
that season to have the plant list of the island as complete as the
circumstances would permit. In preparing the little volume for the
press, the lack of works of reference was found a serious drawback.
The following publications were found most helpful Bentham and
Hookers British Flora Witherings English Botany Camerons Gaelic
Names of Plants Hogans Irish and Scottish Gaelic Names ofHerbs,
Plants, Trees, etc. Gregorys History of the West Highlands Oransay
and its Monastery, by F. C. E. MXeill Colla Ciotach Mac
Ghilleasbuig, by Prof. Mackinnon Celtic Monthly, Sept. 1903-Jan.
1904 Geikies Scenery of Scotland Notes on the Geology of Colon- say
and Oransay, by Prof. Geikie The Two Earth-Movements of Colonsay,
by W. B. Wright, B.A., F.G.S. Sketch of the Geology of the Inner
Hebrides, by Prof. Heddle Journals of the Scottish Meteorological
Society Address on the Climate of the British Isles, by A. Watt,
M.A., etc... The writer trusts that much of the matter contained in
the following pages may be regarded as typical of and applicable in
many respects to the Western Islands as a whole. He would gladly
have entered intogreater detail regarding the old-time industries,
place-names, topography, traditions, and folk-lore of Colonsay, but
the general reader may be of opinion that enough has been said on
these matters in a work primarily intended to treat of the flora of
the island. KILORAN, COLONSAY, . December 1909. M.M c . CONTENTS
include: CHAP. PAGB 1. GENERAL DESCRIPTION . . . . . . 3 2. CLIMATE
. . ... 45 3. GEOLOGICAL FORMATION . . . . . 54 4...
In Downtown, Pete Hamill leads us on an unforgettable journey
through the city he loves, from the island's southern tip to Times
Square, combining a moving memoir of his days and nights in New
York with a passionate history of its most enduring places and
people.
A Scotsman (?) travels in the U.S., mostly in the Mid-Atlantic but
with jaunts Southward and in the Mid-West.
The English clergyman examines the middle section of America as it
is being developed, paying especial attention to the flora and
fauna and Native Americans in addition to the expected commentary
on American religious observance.
Of all those admirable and doughty Victorian lady-travellers Miss
Amelia Edwards is surely one of the brightest lights, and this, her
classic introduction to ancient Egypt, still stands up like an
obelisk above the bulk of learned tomes and endlessly churned out
travel guides. Straightened means obliged her to earn her living,
and she was already a successful writer and a talented artist and
musician when, in middle-age, bad weather unexpectedly changed her
life. Her painting holiday in France sabotaged, she took a boat
from Marseilles to Alexandria, and hired a dahabiyah to venture up
the Nile. The rest of her life she devoted tirelessly to the
setting-up of professional excavation in Egypt, founding the Egypt
Exploration Fund (with Reginald Stuart Poole) and establishing the
first chair of Egyptology in England at University College,
initially occupied by her protege Flinders Petrie. Nothing of the
contagious enthusiasm and wonder she conveys, as the beauties of
Egypt are daily unfolded before her, is lost from the subsequent
research and painstaking erudition she crams into these pages. The
joy is as fresh as when first felt, and the reader feels privileged
to share these experiences with her.
When Sybil Hall Nowell set off from San Francisco one February
morning in 1935 on a round-the-world trip with her husband Jack,
the energetic American couple fell into the embrace of the British
Empire with great gusto. As they traveled through Australia and New
Zealand and then through Africa up to Britain they delighted in the
formality, civility, and good manners that defined at least the
surface of the British imperial experience. During their four-month
voyage, Sybil Nowell studiously wrote letters home at every stop,
describing this calm and orderly world. Sybil Nowell's letters,
introduced and edited here by Robert N. White (her grandson) who
has provided useful historical and political commentary, portray
the easy complacency of Empire that came with power, privilege, and
prestige.
2011 marks the centenary of the death of Edward Whymper, one of the
most important figures in the history of mountaineering. His ascent
of the Matterhorn in 1865, and the deaths of four members of his
party on the way down, attracted attention throughout the world,
bringing him praise and criticism in equal measure. In later years,
he largely devoted his life to lecturing and writing guidebooks,
touring Britain, Europe and America. Whymper was an early member of
the Alpine Club and in the club's archives is a set of magic
lantern slides he used to illustrate his lectures. Based on
extensive research, former AC Archivist Peter Berg has combined
these images with extracts from Whymper's books and diaries and
writings by his contemporaries, to recreate the lecture 'My
Scrambles amongst the Alps', first given in 1895. These pictures,
mostly not seen for 100 years and never been published as a set
before, give us a unique glimpse of the mountain world at the end
of the 19th century. We visit the Zermatt valley and its peaks,
passes and glaciers, experience Whymper's many attempts to climb
the Matterhorn, explore the Mont Blanc region, including the
ill-fated building of an observatory on the summit, and share some
of the joys and sorrows of mountaineering. Setting the lecture in
context, is a foreword by the distinguished mountaineer and former
AC President, Stephen Venables.
'Will someone pay for the spilled blood? No. Nobody.' Mikhail
Bulgakov wrote these words in Kiev during the turmoil of the
Russian Civil War. Since then Ukrainian borders have shifted
constantly and its people have suffered numerous military foreign
interventions that have left them with nothing. As a state, Ukraine
exists only since 1991 and what it was before is controversial
among its people as well as its European neighbours. Writing in a
simple and vivid way, Jens Muhling narrates his encounters with
nationalists and old Communists, Crimean Tatars and Cossacks,
smugglers, archaeologists and soldiers, all of whose views could
hardly be more different. Black Earth connects all these stories to
convey an unconventional and unfiltered view of Ukraine - a country
at the crossroads of Europe and Asia and the centre of countless
conflicts of opinion.
In this stunning and inspiring guide, Kate Rew, founder of the
Outdoor Swimming Society, takes you on a wild journey across
Britain, braving the elements to experience first-hand some of the
country's most awe-inspiring swim spots, from tidal pools in the
Outer Hebrides to the white-sand beaches of the Isles of Scilly.
Waterfalls, natural jacuzzis, sea caves, meandering rivers - every
swim is described in loving detail, taking in not only the gleeful
humour of each mini-adventure and the breathtaking beauty of the
surroundings, but also practical information about how to find
these remote spots. Featuring evocative photography from Dominick
Tyler, this is a must-have book for serious swimmers and seaside
paddlers alike, and is perfect for the outdoors enthusiast in your
life.
CONTENTS include: CHAPTER I. CHAPTER II. BETWEEN ROME AND NAPLES l6
CHAPTER III. NAPLES NAPOLI ... 65 CHAPTER IV. EXCURSIONS WEST OF
NAPLES. . . . . . .152 CHAPTER V. EXCURSIONS EAST OF NAPLES IQ2
CHAPTER VI. NOLA, AVELLINO, AND BENEVENTUM 247 CHAPTER VII. IN THE
ABRUZZI . 26 1 vni CONTENTS. IN APULIA . . . . ... CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX. . PAGE . . 284 IN MAGNA GRAECIA EASTERN CALABRIA . . .
. 335 CHAPTER X. IN THE BASILICATA AND WESTERN CALABRIA . . . 359
SICILY . . . CHAPTER XL . . . . . . . .371 CHAPTER XII. SICILY THE
EASTERN COAST . . . . ... CHAPTER XIII. 384 GIRGENTI AND THE
SOUTHERN COAST . . . . . 457 CHAPTER XIV. PALERMO AND THE NORTHERN
COAST ., ... 476 SOUTHERN ITALY. CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION: THE
attractions of Naples and its neighbourhood have always been
familiar to travelling Englishmen, but, in publishing a book on the
rest of Southern Italy, the author has an uncomfortable sense of
sending forth what few will read, and fewer still will make use of
on the spot. English travellers nearly always play at follow the
leader, and there are probably not two hundred living who have ever
explored the savage scenery of the Abruzzi, the characteristic
cathe- drals of Apulia, or the historic sites of Magna Graecia.
Except the admirable Unter-Italien of Gsell-fells, the Grande Grece
of Frangois Lenormant, and the chapters on the Abruzzi, Apulia, and
Naples, in the Italian Sculptors of C. C. Perkins, nothing of
importance has been written about these places it has not been
considered worth while even the beautiful illustrations in Lears
Journal of a Landscape Painter have failed to attract a stream of
travellers as far south as Calabria. The vastness and ugliness of
the districts tobe traversed, the bareness and filth of the inns,
the roughness of the natives, the torment of zinzare the terror of
earthquakes, the insecurity of the roads from brigands, and the far
more serious risk of malaria or typhoid fever from the bad water,
are natural causes which have hitherto frightened strangers away
from the south. But every year these risks are being mitigated, and
some of the travellers along the southern railways to Sicily may
perhaps now be induced to linger on the way, though, with the
single exception of the hotel at Reggio, the inns in Calabria are
still such as none but the hardiest tourists, will like to
encounter, and all the lower sites are seldom free from fever.
There is not, however, the same reason for hurrying through Apulia,
which is generally healthy, and where the rapid improvement of the
inns will soon permit archeologists to its explore wonderful old
cities with comfort. Every year the glorious country between Rome
and Naples is becoming better known. All the places near the
Eternal City have been already fully described in Days near Rome,
but they are more briefly noticed here, as all the cities north
ofRome will henceforward be included in Cities of Central Italy. In
the towns of the Alban, Sabine, Volscian, and Hernican hills, the
accommodation is often poor, but the inns are for the most part
clean, and travellers will almost always receive a genial and
disinter ested welcome from the kind-hearted inhabitants. The Italy
of artists is to be found more amongst these mountain districts
than in any other part of the peninsula. Here the costumes still
glow with colour, and the wonderful picturesqueness of the towns is
only equalled by the exqui- sitebeauty and variety of the scenery.
The way in which the national character alters, as Naples is
approached, must be incredible to those who have not lived in
Italy...
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