Non-fiction. History books. Science for amateur readers. Politics. Social sciences. Essay collections. War reporting. Travel writing. All of them and more reviewed by the Bookworm. Pulp fiction not allowed.
Showing posts with label travels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travels. Show all posts
Saturday, 23 February 2013
Dervla Murphy, Full Tilt
If you've been visiting Bookworm's Cave frequently, you probably already suspect that I intend to read EVERYTHING by Dervla Murphy. I'm slightly less than halfway there at the moment, with eight books read and reviewed (including today's), one waiting on the shelf and only, ehm, fifteen to go.
(Now that I did the maths I can see that I'm more like one third there but hush, don't tell anyone)
I embarked upon this quest for one simple reason: Murphy's books are amazing. I haven't yet come across an author who would offer such a perfect mixture of readability, sense of humour, vivid conscience, kindness, courage and... well, I could probably continue with half a page of further praiseworthy qualities but I try to avoid monstrous sentences when I can. You surely get the picture.
Living in Ireland helps in the quest. Having been born and raised in Co. Waterford, Dervla Murphy is a bit of a national treasure and as such is fairly well represented in Irish libraries. I said 'fairly', because getting hold of all her books will still take some tracking (and perhaps an Amazon purchase or two), but I'll get there in the end. Howgh!
Full Tilt is the very first of Murphy's travelogues. She wrote it in 1963, during an epic bicycle journey from Ireland to India. When I say 'during', I mean it: the book is mostly a transcript of her diaries, written on the go.
It was interesting to study the difference between 'early Dervla' and 'mature Dervla'. Her unmistakable style is there from the very start (not really a surprise). So are frugality, skillful use of language and 'Irish charm'. What's missing is a lifetime of experience as a travel writer, visible not in the language itself, but in general attitude. Full Tilt's journey feels like an adventure of a lifetime, not a way to earn a living. As I'm well acquainted with Dervla's stories by now, it gave me funny sense of omniscience, as in 'I know how your life will go from now and you don't know it yet...'.
What else is different? There's very little politics in Full Tilt, no typical Murphy-esque activism. At the age of 32, Dervla was already sharply distrustful of the so-called progress and sensitive to injustice, but not yet a fully-fledged activist. Fair enough. Such writing, if it's to have any value at all, requires maturity.
When it comes to the book's structure... Let's just say that Murphy improved with age. Full Tilt is marketed as Ireland-India trip, but distance between Ireland and Iran in covered in the first 18 pages, India gets the final 9 and the bulk of the narrative is really given over to Afghanistan and Pakistan. Not a fault in itself, but I felt somewhat cheated (and this is as far as I'm willing to go in criticising Dervla Murphy). The story ends abruptly - too abruptly - but it is continued in Murphy's second book, Tibetan Foothold.
I'm so looking forward to it!
Friday, 10 February 2012
Jan Morris, Travels
If you don't know it yet, let me tell you - Jan Morris is a GIANT of travel writing. She (or once he, having been born as James Morris) has been to everywhere on our planet, or so it seems. Any travel writing tribute/anthology/collection includes something of hers, and so does any bookshop's and library's travel section. I've seen her described as the greatest travel writer of our (or indeed, all) times and well, she IS good.
Even so, I'm not joining her fan club. I can't quite put my finger on the reason, but somehow Morris's writing... bores me (and yes, I do feel a bit as if I was spitting on a monument when saying so). I can't quite tune into her visionary descriptions, I can't see what she sees in places she describes. It might be because she steers towards what I perceive as poetry or even mysticism and my preference is for cold, hard facts and saucy anecdotes. It might be just me. And even I can't deny that her grasp of language is truly impressive.
Travels was written long, long time ago. In 1976, to be precise. In this particular instance, I believe the fact to be an advantage. The world as described in this small collection of essays (150 or so pages) exists no more. Hong Kong is no longer British. Dublin is no longer poor. None of other places included in Travels is what it was thirty six years ago, and it adds to the booklet's charm. It's no longer ordinary travel writing, it's history. A history not written by politically-minded demagogues, but by an eye witness who's not conscious of writing a historical account.
For that alone, Travels deserves to be read.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)