| A Sense of the World: How a Blind Man Became History's Greatest Traveler
Publisher: HarperCollins |
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| ISBN: 0007161069 List Price: $26.95 Amazon Price: $16.98 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: Fascinating read, hard to put it down! This is one of the best biographies I've read in a long while. I am really impressed with the research Jason Roberts had to have done in order to compile this story. It is difficult to comprehend that this story was lost for so long. It is an amazing tale, full of drama, mystery and suspense, mixed with details of long-forgotten cultures and values. Well worth your time. Summary: Fascinating, beautiful and potentially life-changing. Seriously. I bought this because of the rave review in Time magazine, which said "'A Sense of the World' is inspiring--but in the real way, the way most 'inspirational' books aren't." Even before I finished reading it, I went out and bought four more copies to give away as gifts. This is one of the most fascinating books I've ever read, but it's also more than that. I was entertained, I was moved, and I was filled with a fresh resolve to live my own life to the fullest. This book can change your own sense of the world! By now you know the story is of James Holman, a naval lieutenant who lost his sight to a mysterious illness in the early 1800s. First he learned how to navigate on his own, then he went to medical school to find a cure for his own condition. He couldn't. But he found the next best thing to a cure in the challenge of solitary travel. The wonderful writing made me care deeply about Holman, even before he went blind. There is another review on this site that says the pre-travel and medical parts aren't interesting, but I found them fascinating and vital to understanding the man's character. When Holman does start traveling, he takes you with him across the world, from Siberia to uncharted Africa to the Australian outback and beyond. This is a book about what it means to be alive. An absolute MUST read, even if you don't normally read historical books, or nonfiction! Summary: Interesting Subject, mediocre book I borrowed this book from the library because of the tremendous reviews it got in several magazines whose reviewers I respect. What a disapointment. The subject, Holman, is fascinating but the book is not. The author spends several chapters discussing medicine and blindness during the subject's time. Boring and irrelevant, other than Holman's own medical studies. The TRAVELS are what we want to know about. Holman's early travels are described in some detail, but they are the least interesting as he is traveling the "known" western world. His later travels, off the beaten path, literally "around the world" are only listed but no details are given. After reading the book we only have a partial sense of what Holman went through. As a simple biography, recounting his life, the book could be pared down, tremendously. As an account of Holman's travels it is inadequate. Don't buy it, borrow it. Summary: |
| Seaworthy: Adrift with William Willis in the Golden Age of Rafting
Publisher: Crown |
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| ISBN: 0307335941 List Price: $24.95 Amazon Price: $15.72 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: A Fiction Writer Tries His Hand at Biography Pearson's stark writing style and excellent storytelling makes this book an excellent read. If you like a facinating story told simply, you'll like this book. Summary: |
| The Twenty-One Balloons
Publisher: Puffin |
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| ISBN: 0140320970 List Price: $6.99 Amazon Price: $6.99 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: The Twenty-One Balloons "As an honorary member of the Western American Explorers' Club in San Francisco, I feel sincerely that I owe the first accounting of my extraordinary adventure to that illustrious fraternity." Professor William Waterman Sherman just wanted to get away from teaching arithmetic when he left on a balloon voyage for a year, but he didn't get a balloon voyage, he received a balloon disaster. In the book 'The Twenty-One Balloons', the captain of the freighter S.S. Cunningham finds this man in the Atlantic Ocean with a wreckage of twenty balloons, and the whole world want to know his story, but because of the Professor's extreme loyalty, they have to wait. Professor Sherman finally tells his story of an unusual adventure. When he has a balloon accident, he lands on the small island of Krakatoa. There he meets the islanders and learns of ther abnormal ways, which include a gourmet government, a volcano, and houses built on diamond foundations. But when this active volcano erupts, what will happen? Will these strange but humourous people survive? 'The Twenty-One Ballons' is totally original and is a stupendous, fast read. Du Bois has written it with so much creativity which wouldn't be expected in the case of a balloon accident. This fantasy tale is funny and full of excitement and wonder. ~AD Summary: The Twenty-One Ballons I purchased this book because I first read it as a child in 1961. It was the first time the island of Krakatoa was brought to my attention, and helped spawn my interest in geology. The book was new and in pristine condition. Reading it brought back wonderful memories Summary: Magical Sigh.... Fond memories... Magical. Loved this book as a child. In about 6th grade, I discovered this book, and read it a couple times, checked out from the library. Then, as an adult, I bought it for myself, and I keep buying it for the kids and grandkids. Delightful. The author, William du Bois, rather a French gentleman, writes in a style different from American norm. But, that's part of the magic. The formalness of his descriptions and storytelling. I love an adventure, real or in a book. As a kid, I read tons and tons of books, and would get completely absorbed in them. This one was like that. Reading it, I could see it all in my head, like a movie. To me, that's what makes a really good book. My kids all read this, at ages from 10 - 16, and now I'm passing to the grandkids. Buy a few. Good clean fun! Summary: |
| Tenth City (Land Of Elyon Book)
Publisher: Orchard Books |
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| ISBN: 0439700957 List Price: $11.99 Amazon Price: $9.23 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: A Great Completion... Disappointed that this is the final book, I wanted more because I love reading Patrick Carman's books! He is such an amazing fantasy writer and writes his books with So much detail, you can imagine it perfectly in your head. The plot of this book is genius, concluding the series with a Huge twist. Not the best in the series, this installment has just as much fantasy and adventure as the other two (The Dark Hills Divide and The Valley of the Thorns). Fun and enchanting, I didn't want to put this book down until I finished reading the Whole thing, because it just wraps you up into a different world and it is just So much fun to be in that world of fantasy. A quick read, this is totally a buy from the bookstore instead of getting it at your local library, for you probobly would want to read it again and again and just want to imagine what would happen in Alexa's future. This book is highly recommended along with the whole series! A Great and Fun Trip into Fantasy this Is! Hope you enjoy! Jordan Overall grade* A- Summary: Carman completes the series with a bang "No evil can resist the power of love forever." - Wise words from Warvold Alexa, now a gangly 13-year-old adventurer, gets ready to fight the battle of a lifetime as she and her friends sail across the Lonely Sea upon the ship, Warwick Beacon. While they know that they face many dangers, they have little understanding of what all this ultimately will mean to them. Hoping to rescue her dear little friend Yipes and set free Elyon from the fallen Seraph Abaddon and the evil Victor Grindall with his horrible ogres, they move ahead with both courage and fear. One major difference is that Alexa now carries the very last magical Jocasta stone. It is through the Jocasta stone that she is able to talk with her animal friends. And it is the Jocasta stone that can make all the difference in the outcome of the great battle of good and evil ahead. Again in the company of Murphy, the highly nervous squirrel, her faithful wolf companion Odessa, the soaring hawk Squire, and the gentle giant Armon, they fight all manner of evil together as they are set upon by black swarms (bats) and stinking, robot-like ogres. There is the horror of a traitor among them and their greatest sacrifice yet as their beloved Warvold is thrown to his death by Grindall and the ogres. In a twisted yet brilliant plot, Alexa manages to fool and rid their world of the terrible forces of Abaddon and Grindall --- leading them to their deaths before they destroy Elyon or the Tenth City. As the final chapters close on this strange but unforgettable little group, many truths are revealed. Alexa learns that the beauty of the mystical Tenth City will always be there for her. She also learns that Elyon is restored to its beauty once more and that she and her friends will have yet more adventures. But most important to this curious, brave young girl is a personal discovery that will help her determine where her love of adventure comes from. This third and final book in The Land of Elyon trilogy is perhaps the best yet. Again Patrick Carman manages to pull in many important contemporary issues of environment, lust and power. His characters are diverse with both good and bad qualities. For the necessary flow and understanding, this is the kind of series that would be better read from the beginning. --- Reviewed by Sally M. Tibbetts (stibbetts@maine207west.k12.il.us) Summary: Awesome I loved the book but it is so obvious that Patrick is trying to convert Elyon to God but in the Hebrew scipture Elyon means the highest one. Oh I'm going to write what happend in the book so if anyone doesn't want me to reuin the surprise don't read my review. Warvold is killed by the Ogres; Alexa, Yipes, Armon, Murphy, and Odessea find the Tenth City and see John Christopher, Warvold, and all other people who were there allies that died, Alexa finds out that Warvold and Catherine are her real parents, Roland is her Uncle,and Nicolas is her brother, Yipes never returns to the forest, and someone close and unexpected betrays them. Summary: |
| Holy Cow: An Indian Adventure
Publisher: Broadway |
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| ISBN: 0767915747 List Price: $12.95 Amazon Price: $10.36 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 1 Reviews: Summary: Would buy it if cover was different Being a Hindu myself, I found the cover very disrespectful. I did read a few pages at random and found them interesting. If the cover is different, I would buy the book. Summary: From the Dailai Lama, to Yoga to Bollywood it is all there I traveled through India in the late eighties alone as a woman. Not backpacking, but unfortunately with a suitcase, I could not lock away anywhere. I was fascinated by the country and always wanted to go back. When I was in India I regretted the most that I was not prepared and in many ways helpless how to deal with street vendors who would attach themselves to me for hours , especially in Rajasthan. I never had one single problem with Indian men or with beggars being a big nuisance. And I was surprised to read Macdonald's tales in that respect. Maybe it made a difference, that I dressed in the traditional Salwar Kameej and mostly covered my blonde hair with a shawl. As I am planning to go back one day I am always looking for books, which would help me to confront India the next time with more understanding and preparedness. I want to end up in the hotels, I have chosen instead in the hotels the taxi driver chooses. And I want to learn a little bit more about the religions, and the festivals of India, as I have been practicing Yoga now for over 20 Years I am planning to visit at least one of the ashrams. So when I happened to read about the "Holy Cow" I bought the book and read it within one day. There is no question that pollution and noise was a major problem for me too. But I have to admit that I found it even worse on my subsequent visit to Bangkok. I was not as lucky as Ms. Macdonald to actually live in India, I nevertheless have met mostly friendly, helpful and welcoming people. Of course I realized that I had to pay much more money than the locals and it frustrated me first. But complete strangers opened their house to me when all the hotels were booked in Bangalore and saved me from virtually sleeping in the street. As everybody always told me to expect huge amount of poor people, I was prepared for the worst. I have to say I have seen similar or worse in Nairobi, Haiti and for me personally more shocking in the United States, as I was not prepared to see beggars in rags sleep in the entrances of 5th Avenue apartment houses in New York. In enjoyed the colors, the temples, the palaces, the overwhelming tidal wave of humanity of India. I loved the food,- got only sick once a little bit -and the different landscapes. I enjoyed the book and the humor and the honesty and it gave me a lot of interesting insights in the different ashrams, I could relate to much of it but my personal experience was more love at first sight despite of all the difficulties. Oh, and I thought the cover was very funny. After all I suffered through enough Bollywood movies on the luxury buses :>))). Summary: Makes me want to move to India I read this book because I may be moving to India, and I wanted to read about expats' experiences there. I respect other reviewers opinions on this book, but my personal view is that it was great. I now want to jump on a plane and get to India as soon as possible. I want to know this land full of such loving people, so rich in diverse religions, so full of life. I don't believe that the author intentionally degrades the Indian way of life. Perhaps an Indian author's experiences in the US, Britain or Australia may also come across as critiques, but fortunately, you can see through any criticism to understand that Ms. MacDonald has come to truly love India, as I hope to, very soon. Summary: |
| Whirligig (Laurel Leaf Books)
Publisher: Laurel Leaf |
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| ISBN: 0440228352 List Price: $5.99 Amazon Price: $5.99 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: A review Chris Bird English pd 2 Book review: Whirligig For my tenth grade English class choice novel unit we were asked to choose any book to read and make reviews and summaries based on what you have just read. I chose to read Whirligig; to give you a general idea of what the book is about I'll tell you. Whirligig is about an average teenage boy who got himself into some trouble by making wrong choices and not thinking before he acted. So you can find the book after you read this great review the book is called Whirligig written by Paul Fleischman. Whirligig doesn't waste time with an introduction, it is straight to the point, the book tells the story in a rush. All the important events ravel out of the book at once in the first couple of chapters. The main character Brent is rejected from a girl who he thought would give him major popularity and respect in his new school. Surrounded by witnesses Brent is humiliated and desperate to get away from the scene, so he makes a getaway in his father's car, but too many drinks led to temptations of committing suicide. Brent simply let go of the wheel to the car and fate take place, that's where the problem had occurred. When Brent woke up he found that he had accidentally killed a girl named Lea. Lea's Mother was the one Brent had to answer to for a punishment, she doesn't send him to jail but simply asks that he builds four Whirligigs and place them at the four corners of the United states. Brent accepts the punishment and a bus pass from Lea's mother. The story follows Brent on his adventure to the four corner states. I would highly recommend this book for anybody to read. Summary: READ OR NOT TO READ.... The book Whirligig is by Paul Fleischman. This book will start out a little dull, but it gets better. The theme is about a boy named Brent who is learning how to forgive himself and also maturing a bit too. This book is a combination of mysterious and adventurous. It is mysterious because he meets so many different people, for example the book said, " He'd never met a Canadian before." He wouldn't know if he was a good guy or an evil guy. " The consequences will be real" "No one would go near him." Who knows what he could do. Also could be adventurous because Brent visits different places on his journey. For example, " Let people all over the country receive joy from her." He meets so many people along the journey. All in all, it was between ok and bad because I couldn't stay focused. It was confusing, boring, and dull. There are only two main things that occur in the book and I think they should have added steps up to the event and after the event. Summary: Whirligig review Whirligig by Paul Fleischman is about Brent a high school senior who is new to town he was at a party trying to gain acceptance from the popular kids especially Brianna the girl he liked. When he tried to talk to her but she just rejected him. Drunk and angry he drove off in attempt to commit suicide by crashing his car into on coming traffic but he fails instead he kills a girl named Lea. Tormented by this tragic incident all he can think about is what he has done. When he goes to court to face trial Lea's mother wants to have a meeting with him. At the meeting Lea's mother asks Brent to make whirligigs that look like Lea in the four corners of The United States. On this journey Brent makes these whirligigs and affects many people without even meeting them which is karass. This book shows the way each person is connected and how you can affect people, Brent affected many people with his creations like a violinist and a holocaust surviver. On his trip he has time to think about what he has done and how he can find himself. At the beginning he has troble with getting over the fact that he killed someone so he keeps to himself and doesn't talk to anyone. But once he realizes that its in the past and he need to get he job done which is building the whirligigs he feels better. When he makes the whirligigs he feels like that he matters and that he is making a difference. He tries to make them look like Lea in remembrance of her. His whirligig creations are very creative and he spends a lot of time thinking about them and making them. This book is difficult to understand from the beginning because of the different settings in each chapter but once the book comes to a close it brings it all together. Summary: |
| The Naked Tourist: In Search of Adventure and Beauty in the Age of the Airport Mall
Publisher: North Point Press |
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| ISBN: 0865477094 List Price: $24.00 Amazon Price: $15.60 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 4 Reviews: Summary: A Rather Crotchety Traveler Mired Most Entertainingly in Self-Discovery It's quite obvious that Alain de Botton, author of "The Art of Travel", and Lawrence Osborne are kindred spirits in their expert ability to discern the power of "whateverness" in experiencing locations foreign to one's sensibilities. Osborne's initial premise is to move from civilization to the bowels of the planet in order to show how the world has become less individualistic, that it seems one-size-fits-all tourism has diluted the cultural sense of locations and that the true allure of travel can only be found in the world's most remote pockets. I don't think he entirely proves his thesis, but his biting and entertaining travel tome is quite a treat, as he cuts a sharp swath through the Asian corridor from Dubai to Papua-New Guinea. He is not your typical globe trekker but a traveler who shifts his motivations as the circumstances dictate. Sometimes the author reaches a cathartic point of self-discovery, but more often, he seems to be going back to something instinctual as if his travels satisfy a need simply to roam. His sense of adventure borders on the absurdly humiliating, for example, a high-colonic he has in Bangkok, which brings out the worst nightmares of medical treatment abroad. In Dubai, where he begins his journeys in earnest, he describes in vivid detail "The World", an extravagant project to be designed to recreate the entire globe with three-hundred man-made islands in the Persian Gulf, each up for sale to highest bidders among the world's nations. Bangkok beckons him for the luxury and potential debauchery of its Vegas-like spas, and with the plethora of party-seeking foreign tourists and American-style bars, Bali brings the author a faux-sense of its culture and people seemingly brainwashed to accommodate tourist expectations. He is enamored with the works of legendary anthropologist Margaret Mead and others of her field who have perhaps inadvertently built up the mystique and idyllic state of Bali. However, the best part of the book focuses on the author's transformative moments in Papua, where the somewhat surreal existence of its native population gives him pause. He comes upon an abandoned missionary house in Wanggemalo where he is gawked at by members of the local tribe, the Kombai. A typical ritual of the Kombai is cutting potential sorcerers into four parts, then cooking their brains and viscera on hot stones and eating them boy is led in by a village policeman. As Osborne delves deeper into the jungle, he is met with even greater peril where he eats pasty-floured grubs and meets natives who know nothing of an outside world. Osborne's cynicism wears away in this section as he develops an honest rapport with the Papuan jungle natives much to his chagrin. It is indeed a grand journey by a most English gentleman. Summary: original, thoughtful odyssey into darkness Since I liked this book so much, I thought I would paste Pico Iyer's amazing review of it in the LA Times... The Naked Tourist: In Search of Adventure and Beauty in the Age of the Airport Mall Lawrence Osborne North Point Press: 278 pp., $24 MARGARET MEAD "is a great travel writer precisely because she is not a travel writer," asserts Lawrence Osborne as he draws toward the end of "The Naked Tourist," his account of an inspired experiment in meta-travel, and you half-imagine that he is hoping we will say the same of him. Stumbling from New York to Papua New Guinea, from shopping mall to gated spa, lurching between a grand Kolkata hotel and hellish streets a few yards away, Osborne embarks on a trip to explore, perhaps to prove, the idea that the travel book is dead, if only because travel itself -- in the sense of voyaging to otherness -- is on the brink of expiration; everywhere you go today, you blunder out of the look-alike airport to face the very Holiday Inn, golden arches and Starbucks you've traveled 8,000 miles to escape. Like figures from some ancient myth, we circle the world to flee from ourselves and our familiar lives only to look up and see that we (and our familiar lives) are looking down on us from the screens of the Ginza or Times Square. I happen to disagree with this contention -- a McDonald's in Thailand is to me as Thai as one in Santa Barbara is Santa Barbaran -- and the world to me is as inexhaustible as it ever was, even if the nature of exoticism has changed (to take in Jackson Heights -- or the Mall of America -- as much as Timbuktu). But if anyone could convince me otherwise, through wryness and panache alone, it would be Osborne, who undertakes a grand tour of the 21st century that gains abundantly from the fact that he is not terribly grand and certainly not much of a tourist. The man who is tired of London, as Samuel Johnson might have said (were he in a six-star Bangkok hospital today), should just try the global emporium in Dubai International Airport's "transit consumer" hub. Osborne's premise, in short, is to chronicle a journey through the virtual, simulacrum world that has emerged so quickly that increasingly we can barely tell (or long to tell) one site from another. He decides to sample Planet Tourism, as he calls it, and experience "whateverness" by passing gradually along "the Asian highway" through a series of ever more ersatz places until he arrives at the unadorned treehouses of west Papua, an area kept remote by civil wars and cannibalism. Along the way, he tells us that French playwright Antonin Artaud based his "theater of cruelty" partly upon the intensities of Balinese dance, that boys in Thailand enjoy the legal right to wear skirts to school, and that in Papua pidgin, the pope is known as "Jesus Number One Man." Tourism has become the largest industry in the world today -- the number of international travelers went up almost 30-fold from 1950, when only 25 million people crossed borders, to 2002, when 700 million did -- and, as Osborne writes with typical aplomb, "The principal occupation of hundreds of millions of humans is now simply entertaining hundreds of millions of other humans." Osborne is an Englishman of the oldish school, scrupulously crotchety, generally disenchanted and aware enough of worldly realities not to make a fuss about them. Like fellow traveler Paul Theroux, whose writing he sometimes echoes, Osborne is quick, unobtrusively well read and so careful not to seem earnest that we are as taken aback as he is when he is at last moved, at the end of his trip, by the Kombai tribe in the Papuan rain forest: "Who knew men could be white?" one says upon confronting our author. "And women, too." Elsewhere the sometime New Yorker writer offers nicely researched, highly digestible mini-lectures on the history of the grand tour (a term coined in 1670), the sudden transformation of Dubai (soon to boast the world's largest tower, the world's largest shopping mall and the world's largest theme park) and even the framework in which to reflect on all this. His companions on the page are not, after all, tourist brochures or flights of promotional optimism, but anthropologists Mead and Claude Lévi-Strauss and Marxist theorist Guy Debord, who memorably noted that when the spectacle is everywhere, "the spectator feels at home nowhere." Though "The Naked Tourist" (an inapt title for a thoughtful book) doesn't offer much soul, it does have plenty of vivid, entertaining and often unorthodox perceptions. The method may seem haphazard, but the book begins to disclose its shape and thrust as it goes on. The story starts, perhaps inevitably, in Dubai, where the project called "The World" promises to re-create a map of the entire globe with man-made islands in the Persian Gulf, each of the 250 or 300 "nations" up for sale to the highest bidder. From there, Osborne moves to Bangkok's Greco-Roman spas, which brilliantly improve upon Las Vegas' re-creations, and finally arrives at the tourist mecca of Bali, remade for travelers alone, its locals encouraged to play carefully constructed versions of themselves for visitors. Thus when he gets to Bali, Osborne dispenses relatively quickly with pro forma denunciations of Hard Rock Cafes, Australian girls trawling for handsome local boys and the omnipresent, echoing call-and-response of dreams demanded and dreams supplied, and moves rapidly onto more interesting ground. Mead (with whom he openly falls in love over the course of his travels, her published letters clutched tightly to his chest) came to Bali in 1936 to study the cultural roots of schizophrenia, he notes, and he goes on to remind us that the savagery rife across Indonesia during the anti-communist convulsions of 1965 was more brutal and horrifying in Bali than anywhere else. It was foreign anthropologists and intellectuals who built up the image of a magical and idyllic Hindu island of artists and magicians, between the world wars, and President Sukarno, born to a Balinese mother, who saw the virtue of playing up the "Bali Hai" mystique. For 70 years now, foreign settlers have been talking about the imminent loss of paradise in Bali, and doing what they can to profit from it, like snakes in the shadows of Eden. It is in his writing about Bangkok, though, that Osborne really won me over. At this point, it is almost impossible to say anything new about what has become the Angelina Jolie of modern cities: infinitely seductive, so sleekly marketed and silky that it is unassimilable and irresistible in equal measures and so iconic that its real character remains opaque. "Hedonopolis," as Osborne calls the Thai capital, is already the seventh-most-visited city in the world, and it has so seamlessly remade itself to meet tourist needs -- so nimbly identified itself with its ability and eagerness to please -- that it has become the Platonic model of what is pregnantly called the "service industry." Even as he undergoes a procedure in one of Bangkok's innumerable high-tech clinics, three lovely nurses are flitting all around him like something out of a James Bond movie, asking, "Are you pain?" and making him feel as if he has attained the heavenly fields already. Osborne notes every delectable Thai girl he passes (many of them male), mingles with discount liposuction patients, even checks into the infamous Grace Hotel, where Thai women in harem pants and hennaed hair sashay among newly transported workers from the Persian Gulf; more impressively, he puts himself through 11 years' worth of dental treatment (for all of $383), talks to the country's "god" of plastic surgery, and gets him to explain how Iranians fly to Bangkok for sex-change operations with their cash hidden in condoms in embarrassing places and to declare that "Buddhists make good cosmetic surgeons. We're compassionate pragmatists." He also meets the director of an exclusive spa in southern Thailand, who assures him that Chiva-Som is a "Health and Wellness Resort," whose only aim is transformation. Indeed so: In modern Thailand, as Osborne shows, men become women, women become men; Asians become (literally) wide-eyed like Westerners; lifelong bachelors become husbands; and a once-poor country suddenly becomes quite rich. Thailand inspires such enthralled romanticism that it also invites great cynicism, and it is a feat to acknowledge all its complexities and graces, as Osborne does, without ever quite surrendering to them. An English gentleman to the not-so-bitter end, Osborne heads for the red-light bars in almost every place he visits, while never quite losing an ironic distance from all that is swirling around him and never beginning to dignify his journey with the sense that it is a pilgrimage or quest or even a very purposeful idea. Urbanity is his prophylactic. Yet as with the better English travelers of old, his learning is the more distinctive for being so lightly worn. And the very crankiness he so vigorously maintains prepares us nicely for the way he clearly feels moved to real warmth and affection for the sorcerers and cannibals of the Papuan jungle (with whom he shares few words). The innocence, or at least mutual ignorance, on both sides is so extreme that tears begin to flow as the villagers come out to wave goodbye to their intruders. Somehow, in an inauthentic world, authentic emotion still seems possible. Pico Iyer's most recent works of nonfiction are "The Global Soul" and "Sun After Dark." Summary: |
| Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage
Publisher: Carroll & Graf |
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| ISBN: 078670621X List Price: $14.95 Amazon Price: $9.72 Usually ships in 24 hours |
Avg Cusomer Rating: 5 Reviews: Summary: An incredible book Alfred Lansing's book, Endurance, dramatically details the 1914 expedition to the Antarctic led by Sir Ernest Shackleton. Although a non-fiction book, Lansing manages to make it read like a thriller, adventure. He wrote his story using first person accounts, interviews of survivors, journal entries, etc. While sometimes history can be a bit dry, this novel truly makes you feel a part of the adventure and reads very quickly. Ernest Shackleton's leadership abilities ensure not only the survival of the crew, but demonstrate his character as a man. Crew and officers were treated alike and shared in the duties of survival. Order was maintained and his personality and command of the situation enabled the group to survive what could have been a disaster. Summary: This is a "must read"!! Fact is definitely more interesting than fiction. When you consider the intense physical and emotional hardship that the Endurance crew suffered, it is beyond amazing. And, when you stop to think that almost everyone survived, the story becomes almost unbelievable. But the story is true and we get all of the details thanks to the diaries of the crew, the photos taken by ship photographer Hurley, and the excellent writing of Alfred Lansing. This is definitely a book for everyone regardless of your literary interests. Summary: Fantastic Incredible book. The fact that the author interviewed most of the participants in this adventure for his book gives you the real feeling of being there, unlike many history adventure books that are based on conjecture. A truly amazing tale in a strange and wonderful place. Summary: |
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