As you take time out over the summer, always remember to
take a good book on holiday with you. And as you travel yourself, here are a
few travel books to keep you company:
A young man walks from London to Constantinople
between the two world wars, discovering a land and people that were soon to be
lost as Nazi Germany began to take control. Beautifully written and fascinating
history.
A teacher takes the opportunity
to travel to the Solomon Islands. Totally out of his comfort zone, he falls in
love with an entirely different way of life. Lots of humour and some great
descriptions of a beautiful, hidden paradise.
The older brother of James Bond
writer Ian travels with a companion through some of the hardest and least
travelled lands, from Peking to Kashmir, back in 1935. A now-vanished way of
life and the strangest of encounters.
In 1987 a travel writer decides
to follow the Indian monsoon and in doing so, discovers the hidden India.
Writer and poet – and local boy –
travels through the Fens, exploring its history, and writing with wit and
sensitivity about people past and present.
DJ and writer Maconie travels through
his beloved North of England, discovering the real North and the real people
that make it up. I love his sense of humour.
From the Atlantic to the Pacific,
a student walks across America, discovering hidden lives and finding a faith he
never knew he needed.
From a peaceful Cotswold village
to the violence of Spain on the verge of war in 1934, Lee sees things through a
poets eyes. His writing is hard to beat. Quite beautifully written.
Searching for animals, Durrell
travels through South America in the late 1950s. His style is funny and his
travels through Patagonia are amazing.
Another Patagona book – I really
need to go there! In December 1974, journalist Bruce Chatwin decides to travel
south into the hidden lands of South America’s Patagonia. There he meets hidden
Welsh valleys in foreign lands and a wild land of changing seasons. Stylish
writing.
I had to read "As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning" for English Lit O Level (yes we had O levels in my day). It was by a long way the most boring book I had ever read - and the only one I never finished
ReplyDeleteTrevor, how cold you?! His style of writing is exquisite.
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