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Following A Month by the Sea, her acclaimed exploration of life in
Gaza, Dervla Murphy describes with passionate honesty the
experience of living with and among Jewish Israelis and
Palestinians in both Israel and Palestine. In cramped Haifa
high-rises, in homes in the settlements and in a refugee camp on
the West Bank, she talks with whomever she meets, trying to
understand them and their attitudes with her customary curiosity,
her acute ear and mind, her empathy, her openness to the experience
and her moral seriousness. Behind the book lies a desire to
communicate the reality of life on the ground, and to puzzle out
for herself what might be done to alleviate the suffering of all
who wish to share this land and to make peace in the region a
possibility. Meeting the wise, the foolish and the frankly deluded,
she gradually knits together a picture of the patchwork that
constitutes both sides of the divide - Hamas and Fatah, rural and
urban, refugee, indigenous inhabitant, Russian, Black Hebrew and
Kabbalist to name but a fraction. She finds compassion and empathy
in both communities, but is also appalled by instances of its lack
on both sides - a Palestinan woman who will not concede the
suffering of Jewish civilian victims of a suicide bomber, and the
Jewish inhabitants of Hebron who make the lives of their Muslim
neighbours a living hell. Clinging to hope, Dervla comes to believe
that despite its difficulties the only viable future lies in a
single democratic state of Israel/Palestine, based on one person,
one vote - a One-State Solution.
Over the summer of 2011, Dervla Murphy spent a month in the Gaza
Strip. She met liberals and Islamists, Hamas and Fatah supporters,
rich and poor. Used to western reporters dashing in and out of the
Strip in times of crisis, the people she met were touched by her
genuine, unflinching interest and spoke openly to her about life in
their open-air prison. What she finds are a people who, far from
the story we are so often fed, overwhelmingly long for peace and an
end to the violence that has so grossly distorted their lives. The
impression we take away from the book is of a people whose real,
complex, nuanced voice has rarely been heard before. A MONTH BY THE
SEA gives unique insight into the way in which isolation has shaped
this society: how it radicalises young men and plays into the hands
of dominating patriarchs, yet also how it hardens determination not
to give in and turns family into a towering source of support.
Underlying the book is Dervla's determination to try to understand
how Arab Palestinians and Israeli Jews might forge a solution and
ultimately live in peace. Dervla looks long and hard at the
hypocrisies of Western and Israeli attitudes to peace', and at
Palestinian attitudes to terrorism. While this shattered people
long for a respite from the bombings that have ripped a hole, both
literally and psychologically, in their world, it seems that
politicians have an agenda that pays little attention to their
plight.
Life at Full Tilt is a whirlwind tour of Dervla Murphy s travels.
It begins in Spain in 1956, before her first book, and follows in
her tracks for over fifty years, including descriptions of her
beloved Afghanistan in 1963, of the Peruvian Andes, of South, West
and East Africa and most recently of the troubled territories of
Palestine and Israel. Dervla s style of travel, to go somewhere
that interested her and see who she met, made for fresh encounters
every day, recorded faithfully each evening in her journal. She
read hungrily to prepare for her journeys and folded her learning
seamlessly into her books. Finally, between these covers, we are
able to catch up with her work in its entirety. What shines through
is her passionate engagement with the world and its injustices, and
her utter independence of mind. Ethel Crowley, an Irish
sociologist, has for the first time looked at all Dervla s writing
her journalism and her twenty-four books selecting half-a-dozen
extracts from each. She introduces us to a complex character, hard
to pin down, but a role model for women and environmentalists,
Irish to her fingertips and a crucial part of the larger English
tradition of travel writing. With a preface by Colin Thubron
This is the first travel book that tested the idea that a
five-year-old daughter makes for a useful international travelling
companion. Together Dervla Murphy and her daughter Rachel with
little money, no taste for luxury and few concrete plans meander
their way slowly south from Bombay to the southernmost point of
India, Cape Comorin. Interested in everything they see, but only
truly enchanted by people, they stay in fisherman's huts and
no-star hotels, travelling in packed-out buses, on foot and by
local boats. Instead of pressing ever onwards, like so many
travellers, they double back to the place they liked most, the hill
province of Coorg and settle down to live there for two months.
Anchored by her daughter's delight in the company of her Indian
neighbours, Dervla Murphy creates an extraordinarily affectionate
portrait of these cardamon-scented, spiritually and agriculturally
self- sufficient Highlands. If travel is underwritten by an
unwitting search for a lost paradise, this is a quest that was
achieved - made possible with the right sort of travelling
companion.
"The Island That Dared" is a passionate book from the pen of Dervla
Murphy, which begins with a three-generational family holiday in
Cuba. Led by their redoubtable hard-walking grandmother, the trio
of young girls and their mother soon find themselves camping out on
empty beaches beneath the stars with only crabs and mosquitoes for
company. This pure Swallows and Amazons experience confirms Dervla
in her quest to understand the unique society that has been created
by the Cuban Revolution. She returns again and again to explore the
island, investigating the experience of modern Cuba with her
particular, candid curiosity. Through her own research and through
conversations with Fidelistas and their critics alike, "The Island
That Dared" builds a complex picture of a people struggling to
retain their identity in the face of insistent hostility, and to
stand against the all-but-overwhelming fire-power of capitalism.
Whatever the fate of Cuba, "The Island That Dared" beautifully
fulfils the role of a great travel book, 'to catch the moment on
the wing, and stop it in Time' - Colin Thubron.
In 1966 Dervla Murphy travelled the length and breadth of Ethopia,
first on a mule, Jock, whom she named after her publisher, and
later on a recalcitrant donkey. The remarkable achievement was not
surviving three armed robberies or the thousand-mile trail, but the
gradual growth of affection for and understanding of another race.
Originally published in 1965, it is the diary of her bicycle trek
from Dunkirk, across Europe, through Iran and Afghanistan, over the
Himalayas to Pakistan and India. Murphy's immediate rapport with
the people she alights among is vibrant and appealing and makes her
travelogue unique. Venturing aloneaccompanied only by her bicycle,
which she dubs Rozthe indomitable Murphy not only survives daunting
physical rigors but gleans considerable enjoyment in getting to
know peoples who were then even more remote than they are
now.--Publishers Weekly. "This book recounts a trip, taken mostly
on bicycle, by a gritty Irishwoman in 1963. Her route was through
Yugoslavia, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and ended in New
Delhi. She carried a pistol, got sunstroke, and suffered the usual
stomach disorders. She endured bad accommodations but reaped much
local hospitality, too, including a dinner with the Pakistani
president. Most of the book concerns the high mountain country of
Afghanistan and Pakistan...A spirited account."--Library Journal.
In "The Waiting Land" (first published in 1967) Dervla Murphy
affectionately portrays the people of Nepal's different tribes, the
customs of an ancient, complex civilization and the country's
natural grandeur and beauty. This is the third of Dervla Murphy's
early travel books: an exploration of Nepal by a feisty,
generous-hearted young Irish woman. Yet it can also be seen as the
completion of a trilogy of books concerned with her experience of
self- sufficient mountain cultures, first tasted in crossing Persia
and Afghanistan in "Full Tilt", and deepened with her experience of
working with Tibetan refugees in the frontiers of Northern India,
as told in "Tibetan Foothold". Having settled in a village in the
Pokhara Valley to work at a Tibetan refugee camp, she makes her
home in a tiny, vermin-infested room over a stall in the bazaar. In
diary form, she describes her various journeys by air, by bicycle
and on foot into the remote and mountainous Lantang region on the
border of Tibet. Murphy's charm and sensitivity as a writer and
traveller reveal not only the vitality of an age-old civilization
facing the challenge of Westernisation, but the wonder and
excitement of her own remarkable adventures.
Dervla Murphy's first epic journey from Ireland to India by
bicycle, "Full Tilt", is a complete adventure in itself. It is also
the first volume of a trilogy of experience that continues with
Tibetan Foothold. For the young Irish woman, once she had got
herself to India by July 1963, immersed herself in the life of the
sub-continent, working for six months in an orphanage for Tibetan
children in the refugee camps of Northern India. Here, she fell in
love with the 'Tiblets' - the cheerful, tough, uncomplaining,
independent and affectionate children of the new Tibet-in-exile.
Dervla vividly describes day-to-day life in the camps where
hundreds of children are living in squalor while a handful of
dedicated volunteers do their best to feed and care for them,
attempting to keep disease at bay with limited resources. She
pitches in with a helping hand wherever it is needed and finds time
to visit the Dalai Lama and his entourage. Dervla's heart-rending
account is interwoven with her own observations on the particular
cultural and social problems associated with trying to help a
people who have lived in isolation from the rest of the world and
she becomes a perceptive witness to the inner realities and
sometime inadequacies of aid-work. First published in 1966,
"Tibetan Foothold" not only confirmed Dervla's status as a
traveller, but also revealed her to be a truly independent voice
and an acute observer of politics and society.
One winter, Dervla Murphy, the four-footed Hallam (the mule) and
her six-year-old daughter Rachel explored 'Little Tibet' high up in
the Karakoram Mountains in the frozen heart of the Western
Himalayas - on the Pakistan side of the disputed border with
Kashmir. For three months they travelled along the perilous Indus
Gorge and into nearby valleys. Even when beset by crumbling tracks
over bottomless chasms, an assault by a lascivious dashniri, the
unnerving melancholy of the Balts - the heroic highland farmers who
inhabit the area - and Rachel's continual probing questions, this
formidable traveller retained her enthusiasm for her surroundings
and her sense of humour. First published in 1977, "Where the Indus
is Young" is pure Murphy. 'The grandeur, weirdness, variety and
ferocity of this region cannot be exaggerated,' she writes of the
sub-zero temperatures, harsh winds and whipping sands that they
faced. However much the region may have changed due to current day
political situations her descriptions of the mountain splendour and
cultures she explores are appropriately timeless.
In this beautifully written and searingly honest autobiography, the
intrepid cyclist and traveler Dervla Murphy remembers her richly
unconventional first thirty years. She describes her determined
childhood self - strong-willed and beguiled by books from the first
- her intermittent formal education and the intense relationship of
an only child with her parents, particularly her invalid mother,
whom she nursed until her death. Bicycling fifty miles in a day at
the age of eleven, alone, it seems only natural that her first
major journey should have been to cycle to India.
A Place Apart is a remarkable geographical and psychological
travelogue that rises above history, politics, theology and
economics. Created by a southern Irishwoman, cycling into the
mayhem of Northern Ireland in order to try and sort out her own
opinions and emotions about this troubled land. She came equipped
with her own childhood experiences of murder and Republican
martyrdom, but was otherwise unfettered by sectarian loyalties and
armed with a delightful curiosity, a fine ear for anecdote, an
ability to stand her own at the bar and penetrating intelligence.
She travelled extensively through both town and country, frequently
finding herself in horrifying situations, and sometimes among
people stiff with hate and grief: but equally, she discovered an
unquenchable spirit everywhere that refused to die. Other Dervla
Murphy titles published by Eland. Original Hardbacks: A Month by
the Sea: Encounters in Gaza, The Island that Dared: Journeys in
Cuba, Eland Classics: Wheels within Wheels, Full Tilt: From Ireland
to India with a Bicycle, In Ethiopia with a Mule, Where the Indus
is Young: A Winter in Baltistan, Tibetan Foothold, The Waiting
Land: A Spell in Nepal, On a Shoestring to Coorg.
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Silverland (Paperback)
Dervla Murphy
2
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R313
R284
Discovery Miles 2 840
Save R29 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Silverland charts Dervla Murphy's extraordinary expedition through
the snowscapes of Far Eastern Russia. No stranger to adventure, the
intrepid septuagenarian's mid-winter journey takes her beyond
Siberia to the furthest corners of Russia - areas proximate to
Japan, Mongolia and the Arctic Circle. Here she discovers a strange
world of lynx and elks, indigenous tribes and shamanism, reindeer
broth and taiga-berry pie. She takes the coal-fuelled slow-train
around regions hardly exposed to tourism and there she meets a host
of colourful and generous characters. They invite this
unconventional Irish Babushka into their homes where she enjoys
fascinating fireside debate bolstered by steaming samovars of sweet
tea. Just like its author, Silverland is insightful, warm and truly
original.
Through Siberia by Accident is a book about a journey that didn't
happen - and what happened instead. Dervla Murphy never had any
intention of spending three months in the vast territories of
Siberia. Instead she had planned to go to Ussuriland, because it
appealed to her as a place free from tourism. But by accident, or
rather because she had an accident - a painful leg injury -, she
found herself stymied in Eastern Siberia, a place she knew very
little about. Although hardly able to walk, her subsequent
experiences, in an unexpected place, and in an incapacitated state,
provided many pleasant surprises. Above all she was struck by the
extraordinary hospitality, generosity and helpfulness of the
Siberians who made this strange phenomenon - a maimed Irish
babushka - so welcome in their towns and homes. This book is an
extraordinary story of fortitude and resourcefulness as Dervla
Murphy finds friendship and culture in a seemingly monotonous,
bleak and inhospitable place far from what we know as 'civilised'.
Through Siberia by Accident is a voyage of Siberian self-discovery.
David Attenborough, Dion Leonard (Finding Gobi), Dervla Murphy and
Brian Jackman are just four of the authors whose work features in
this new anthology from Bradt focusing on true stories about
travelling with animals. In Beastly Journeys, there are 46 tales of
extraordinary animal travel experiences, from hilarious holidays
with pets to journeys on which wild animals somehow came along for
the ride, including: David Attenborough tries to get an armadillo
through Paraguayan customs; adventurer Ash Dykes takes a white
cockerel to Maromokotro to ward off evil spirits; Mike Gerrard
shares a car journey from Belsize Park to Canvey Island with a
python; Brian Jackman rides, walks and swims with Abu the elephant;
Bradt New Travel Writer of the Year Dom Tulett rows with a
kingfisher; and John Rendall travels to Africa with Christian, the
lion he bought at Harrods and raised in west London. Also included
is a brand new piece of writing from ultramarathon runner Dion
Leonard about his experience with Gobi, the stray dog who
accompanied him for 80 miles over the treacherous Tian Shian
mountains. A mix of new, previously unpublished writers and old
favourites are included, with extracts from writers such as Mark
Shand (Travels on my Elephant), Dervla Murphy (Eight Feet in the
Andes) and Robert Louis Stevenson (Travels with a Donkey), not to
mention Gerald Durrell, 19th-century explorer Isabella Bird and
renowned publisher Michael Joseph. Compelling, engaging,
surprising, humorous and entertaining. if this book proves one
thing it's that travel with animals is every bit as unpredictable
as you would expect it to be.
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Nadine Gordimer
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Discovery Miles 3 400
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