|
Books > Travel > Travel writing
One summer, Simon Armitage decided to walk the Pennine Way - a
challenging 256-mile route usually approached from south to north,
with the sun, wind and rain at your back. However, he resolved to
tackle it back to front, walking home towards the Yorkshire village
where he was born, travelling as a 'modern troubadour', without a
penny in his pockets and singing for his supper with poetry
readings in village halls, churches, pubs and living rooms. Walking
Home describes his extraordinary, yet ordinary, journey of human
endeavour, unexpected kindnesses and terrible blisters. The
companion volume, Walking Away, is published in June 2015.
In 1951 the Australian writers Charmian Clift and George Johnston
left grey, post-war London for Greece. Settling first on the tiny
island of Kalymnos, then Hydra, their plan was to live simply and
focus on their writing, away from the noise of the big city. The
result is two of Charmian Clift's best known and most loved books,
the memoirs Mermaid Singing and Peel Me a Lotus. Mermaid Singing
relays the culture shock and the sheer delight of their first year
on the tiny sponge-fishing island of Kalymnos. Clift paints an
evocative picture of the characters and sun-drenched rhythms of
traditional life, long before backpackers and mass tourism
descended. On Hydra, featured in the companion volume, Peel Me a
Lotus, Clift and Johnston became the centre of an informal
community of artists and writers including the then unknown Leonard
Cohen who lodged with them, and his future girlfriend Marianne
Ihlen.
Eastward bound looks at travel and travellers in the medieval
period. An international range of distinguished contributors offer
discussions on a wide range of themes, from the experiences of
Crusaders on campaign, to the lives of pilgrims and missionaries
and traders in the Middle East. It examines their modes of travel,
equipment and methods of navigation, and considers their
expectations and experiences en route. The contributions also look
at the variety of motives - public and private - behind the
decision to travel eastwards to lands of strange and unfamiliar
peoples. Other essays look at the attitudes of Middle-Eastern
rulers to their visitors. In so doing they provide a valuable
perspective and insight into the behaviour of the Europeans and
non-Europeans alike. There have been few such accessible volumes,
covering such a broad range of material for the reader. The book
will be of use to students and scholars involved in the history,
literature and historical geography of the period.
Expectation meets Julie and Julia, The Yellow Kitchen is a
brilliant exploration of food, belonging and friendship. London
E17, 2019. A yellow kitchen stands as a metaphor for the lifelong
friendship between three women: Claude, the baker, goal-orientated
Sophie and political Giulia. They have the best kind of friendship,
chasing life and careers; dating, dreaming and consuming but always
returning to be reunited in the yellow kitchen. That is, until a
trip to Lisbon unravels unexplored desires between Claude and
Sophie. Having sex is one thing, waking up the day after is the
beginning of something new. Exploring the complexities of female
friendship, The Yellow Kitchen is a hymn to the last year of London
as we knew it and a celebration of the culture, the food and the
rhythms we live by. Praise for The Yellow Kitchen: 'Rich and
thoroughly intoxicating, The Yellow Kitchen is a sensual journey
into friendship, food and female sexuality, full of complex,
fascinating characters and bold ideas. I loved it' Rosie Walsh 'A
heady mix of politics, friendship, sex and food, poignant,
provocative and utterly distinctive' Paula Hawkins 'An exquisite
novel - beautifully rendered, powerfully told, and so deeply felt.
I urge you to read this novel - you will never forget it' Lucia
Osborne-Crowley 'Mixing female friendship, romance, loss,
redemption, and memorable meals, The Yellow Kitchen is the perfect
recipe for a flavorful literary feast. With subtle dashes of wit
and generous sprinklings of honesty, Margaux Vialleron has crafted
a brave and tender tale' Kim Fay, author of Love & Saffron 'The
Yellow Kitchen is so warm and convivial in atmosphere, and its
discussion of the politics of the UK and their impact very
poignant. It portrayed beautifully the sense of adventure of being
a certain age, with its rush and richness and emotional confusion,
and I found it such a satisfying read' Emily Itami, author of Fault
Lines
Part foreign affairs discourse, part humor, and part twisted
self-help guide, The Geography of Bliss takes the reader from
America to Iceland to India in search of happiness, or, in the
crabby author's case, moments of "un-unhappiness." The book uses a
beguiling mixture of travel, psychology, science and humor to
investigate not what happiness is, but where it is. Are people in
Switzerland happier because it is the most democratic country in
the world? Do citizens of Qatar, awash in petrodollars, find joy in
all that cash? Is the King of Bhutan a visionary for his initiative
to calculate Gross National Happiness? Why is Asheville, North
Carolina so damn happy? With engaging wit and surprising insights,
Eric Weiner answers those questions and many others, offering
travelers of all moods some interesting new ideas for sunnier
destinations and dispositions.
The seventh in Cv's series of Barnaby's Relocation Guides explores
the county of Cumbria. Taking a side road from Lancaster the
journey begins at Slaidburn in the Lancashire Forest, progressing
into Cumbria via Kendal, Windermere, and Keswick; then towards the
coast from Maryport and Whitehaven to Barrow-In-Furness and
Ulverston, visiting Cleator Moor. The beautiful environment of
tarns and fells opens many varied experiences for the traveller.
The guide includes information and histories contributed by local
specialists..Hill climbs and fell walks are undertaken, recording
the rugged and spectacular landscape. Moving north of Penrith and
Carlisle the guide documents the extensive and sparsely populated
area of the Kershope Forest, in what was Westmoreland, up to the
Scottish border. The guide is fully illustrated with colour
photographs and route maps.
Alexander von Humboldt, sometimes called 'the last man who knew
everything', was an extraordinary polymath of the late 18th and
early 19th centuries. In 1798 he received unprecedented permission
from the Spanish Crown to explore its American and Caribbean
colonies, which he did from 1799-1804. This is the journal of those
explorations, in which he extensively covers the region's
topography, geology, fauna and flora, anthropology and comparative
linguistics. Volume III sees him recording more information on
Venezuela, visiting Cuba where he also writes about local politics
and speaks out fervently against the slave trade; he then sails for
Colombia. The volume ends with a comprehensive geognostic
description of the northern part of South America.
'An absolute gem of a book' Alastair Humphreys First published in
1926, The Gentle Art of Tramping is as relevant now as then.
Tramping is an approach: to nature, to humankind, to nations, to
beauty, to life itself. This lost classic is a breath of fresh air
for world-weary souls. It is a gentle art; know how to tramp and
you know how to live. Know how to meet your fellow wanderer, how to
be passive to the beauty of nature and how to be active to its
wildness and its rigour. The adventure is not the getting there,
it's the 'on-the-way'. It is not the expected, it is the surprise.
Year after year the family returns to the lake. The children,
barefoot and free, explore its sun-drenched wilderness... The
summer Bruce turns ten seems, at first, like any other: swimming
out to the raft, watching the gulls, frogs and herons, catching
crayfish. But just when he thinks that life is perfect, everything
begins to change, and over the course of two months both the
harshness of the adult world and the patterns of the natural reveal
themselves.Barefoot at the Lake is not only a beautifully written
boy's-eye view of the animals, humans and landscape of his youth,
it is also delightfully funny, with a moving wisdom at its heart.
"God bless the United States and God bless New York City"
proclaimed a sign as the bus rolled through a small Indiana town.
In October 2001, author Bill Markley was traveling by public bus
from Pierre, South Dakota, to Virginia Tech in Blacksburg,
Virginia, for a Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity celebration. The day
Markley left South Dakota began simply enough, but soon tragedy
unfolded when a deranged man of Croatian descent slit the throat of
a Greyhound bus driver causing an accident and throwing the
nation's bus system into disarray. "American Pilgrim" is an honest
account of life on the bus, the characters on the bus, bus culture,
and the mood of the American people-reflective, patriotic, and
upbeat.In those challenging days after the attacks on 9/11,
everyone struggled to make sense of the world; as Markley worked on
this story; it grew beyond the story of a simple 3,000-mile bus
trip. He recalls many of his life's detours, recounting past events
at locations the bus traveled through and people associated with
those locations-a rambling personal history of people, places, and
things. The trip took on new meaning and became a spiritual journey
into the country's past and Markley's past.
'Byrne comes across like a post-punk Michael Palin.' Sephen Dalton,
The Times 'An engaging book; part-diary, part-manifesto.' Observer
David Byrne, co-founder of the group Talking Heads, has been riding
a bicycle as his principal means of transportation since the
1980's. When he tours, Byrne travels with a folding bicycle,
bringing it to cities like London, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Istanbul,
Manila, New York, Detroit and San Francisco. The view from his bike
seat has given Byrne a panoramic window on urban life all over the
world. An enchanting celebration of bike riding and of the rewards
of seeing the world at bike level, this book gives the reader an
incredible insight into what Byrne is seeing and thinking as he
pedals around these cities.
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.
In 1926 Barry Dierks, a young American architect, arrived in Paris
and fell in love with France... With his partner, an ex-officer in
the British Army, he built a white, flat-roofed Modernist
masterpiece that rested on the rocks below the Esterel, with views
across the Mediterranean. They called it Le Trident. From the
moment it was built, it captivated the Riviera. As commissions for
more villas flooded in, Barry Dierks and Eric Sawyer, 'those two
charmers', flourished at the heart of Riviera society. Over the
years, Dierks would design and build over 70 of the Riviera's most
recognisable villas for clients ranging from Somerset Maugham's
Villa Mauresque and Jack Warner's Villa Aujourd'hui to the Marquess
of Cholmondeley's Villa Le Roc, and Maxine Elliott's Chateau de
l'Horizon, later the home of Aly Khan and Rita Hayworth. Riviera
Dreaming tells the dazzling story of the lives, loves and
adventures that played out behind the walls of these glamorous
houses and provides an unparalleled portrait of life on the Cote
d'Azur at the height of the Jazz Age.
What types of holidays do Japanese people celebrate? What is the
educational system like in Japan? What are Japanese festivals like?
What are some of the customs and traditions of the Japanese people?
Professor Todd Jay Leonard, writing from the perspective of living
and working in Japan, provides in this fascinating book the answers
to these and many other questions. Letters Home: Musings of an
American Expatriate Living in Japan delivers a firsthand account of
daily Japanese life through the eyes and personal experiences of
Professor Leonard who has enjoyed an ongoing relationship with
Japan and the Japanese people for nearly twenty-five years. This
anecdotal book of essays, written in the style of personal letters,
offers commentary on a wide range of topics and issues including
culture, history, education, language, society, and religion of
modern Japan from the point-of-view of an American expatriate who
has made Japan his home. The author's friendly, down-to-earth, yet
authoritative, style of writing will transport you to modern Japan,
where you will learn about the customs and traditions of this most
fascinating country. Japan and its people.
Alexander von Humboldt, sometimes called 'the last man who knew
everything', was an extraordinary polymath of the late 18th and
early 19th centuries. In 1798 he received unprecedented permission
from the Spanish Crown to explore its American and Caribbean
colonies, which he did from 1799-1804. This is the journal of those
explorations, in which he extensively covers the region's
topography, geology, fauna and flora, anthropology and comparative
linguistics. Volume II covers the period in which he undertake a
major exploration of the River Orinoco, as far as the borders of
Brazil, finishing in Angostura, then the capital of Spanish Guiana.
Smelling the Breezes is an inspiring adventure, that throws down a
gauntlet about what can be achieved in a family holiday. Rather
than give a leaving party, Ralph and Molly Izzard had their own
plans about how to say goodbye to their home in the Middle East.
They would walk the three-hundred mile spine of the Lebanese
mountains, camping where ever they stopped with their four
children, two donkeys and Elias (their gardener-nursemaid-friend)
as their sole travelling companions.
'Of all his generation's travellers, Jonathan Raban is the most
sophisticated, writing with a subtle and imaginative brilliance.'
Colin Thubron 'One of the most humane and visionary of all travel
writers.' Jeremy Seal Into Jonathan Raban's familiar Earls Court
neighbourhood after the 1970s oil boom came new visitors from the
Arab world, dressed in floor-length robes and yashmaks. A people
apart, little known, Raban wanted to get behind the myth and the
rumour to discover the reality of their lives and world. His
journey took him through Bahrain, Qatar, Abu Dhabi, Yemen, Egypt
and Jordan. What he discovered was a far cry from the camel, tent
and sand dune archetypes of early European explorers. Oil wealth
had seeped into almost every corner, and Bedouin encampments had
been replaced by cosmopolitan boomtowns, camels by Range Rovers.
The sons of Bedouin nomads were now studying medicine in Europe and
engineering in New York. Yet in this fast-moving world, old
certainties remained - and cultural innovation lagged miles behind
economic change. Raban's gift for friendship introduces us to a
series of memorable individuals - rich and poor - set against the
feel, the smells, the sounds and the nuances of Arabia.
Shortly after his death in 1957, "The New York Times" obituary
of Peter Freuchen noted that "except for Richard E. Byrd, and
despite his foreign beginnings, Freuchen was perhaps better known
to more people in the United States than any other explorer of our
time." During his lifetime, Freuchen's remarkable adventures
related in his books, magazine articles, and films, made him a
legend. In 1910, Freuchen, along with his friend and business
partner, Knud Rasmussen, the renowned polar explorer, founded
Thule-a Greenland Inuit trading post and village only 800 miles
from the North Pole.
Freuchen lived in Thule for fifteen years, adopting the ways of
the natives. He married an Inuit woman, and together they had two
children. Freuchen went on many expeditions, quite a few of which
he barely survived, suffering frostbite, snow blindness, and
starvation. Near the North Pole there is no such thing as an easy
and safe outing.
In "Arctic Adventure" Freuchen writes of polar bear hunts, of
meeting Eskimos who had resorted to cannibalism during a severe
famine, and of the thrill of seeing the sun after three months of
winter darkness. Trained as a journalist before he headed north,
Freuchen is a fine writer and great storyteller (he won an Oscar
for his feature film script of Eskimo). He writes about the Inuit
with genuine respect and affection, describing their stoicism
amidst hardship, their spiritual beliefs, their ingenious methods
of surviving in a harsh environment, their humor and joy in the
face of danger and difficulties, and the social politics behind
such customs as "wife-trading." While his experiences make this
book a page-turner, Freuchen's warmth, self-deprecating wit,
writing skill and anthropological observations make this book a
literary stand out.
A classic of travel writing, A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush is Eric
Newby's iconic account of his journey through one of the most
remote and beautiful wildernesses on earth. It was 1956, and Eric
Newby was earning an improbable living in the chaotic family
business of London haute couture. Pining for adventure, Newby sent
his friend Hugh Carless the now-famous cable - CAN YOU TRAVEL
NURISTAN JUNE? - setting in motion a legendary journey from Mayfair
to Afghanistan, and the mountains of the Hindu Kush, north-east of
Kabul. Inexperienced and ill prepared (their preparations involved
nothing more than some tips from a Welsh waitress), the amateurish
rogues embark on a month of adventure and hardship in one of the
most beautiful wildernesses on earth - a journey that adventurers
with more experience and sense may never have undertaken. With good
humour, sharp wit and keen observation, the charming narrative
style of A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush would soon crystallise
Newby's reputation as one of the greatest travel writers of all
time. One of the greatest travel classics from one of Britain's
best-loved travel writers, this edition includes new photographs,
an epilogue from Newby's travelling companion, Hugh Carless, and a
prologue from one of Newby's greatest proponents, Evelyn Waugh.
Henrietta is a true original. Clever, vivacious and interested in
everything, she managed to balance the demands of high profile
public life with that of a caring mother. She was the home-schooled
daughter of a bankrupt Earl and more than just a little bit in love
with her handsome wayward brother, but had been married off to a
plump pudding of a man, the nabob Edward Clive, governor of Madras.
And her partial escape was to ride across southern India (in a vast
tented caravan propelled by dozens of elephants, camels and a
hundred bullock carts) and write home. For centuries this account,
the first joyful description of India by a British woman, remained
unread in a Welsh castle. Fortunately it was transcribed by a Texan
traveller, who went on to splice this already evocative memoir with
complementary sections from the diary of Henrietta's precocious
daughter, the 12-year old Charly and images of their artist
companion, Anna Tonelli. The resulting labour of love and
scholarship is Birds of Passage, a unique trifocular account of
three very different women travelling across southern India in the
late 18th century, in the immediate aftermath of the last of the
Mysore Wars between Tipoo Sahib and the Raj. Half a generation
later, the well travelled Charly would be chosen as tutor for the
young princess Victoria, the First Empress of India.
|
|