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A Traveller's Life (1982)

par Eric Newby

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2653101,309 (3.8)4
A chronicle of travels, some homely some exotic, from the man who can make a schoolboy holiday in Swanage as colourful as a walk in the Hindu Kush. Eric Newby's life of travel began in 1919, on pram-ride adventures with his mother into the dark streets of Barnes and the chaotic jungles of Harrods, and progressed to solo, school-bound adventures around the slums of darkest Hammersmith. His interest piqued, Newby's wanderlust snowballed, and his adventures multiplied, as he navigated the London sewer system, bicycled to Italy and meandered the wilds of New York's Broadway. Whether travelling abroad as a high-fashion buyer for a British department store or for pure adventure as a travel writer, even when reluctantly participating in a tiger shoot in India, Newby chronicles his adventures with verve, humour and infectious enthusiasm. After nine years as the travel editor for the Observer, Newby reluctantly gave up the post, eschewing the new form of human-as-freight travel. However, this change was certainly no pity for his readers, as the latter-day Newby continued on his unwavering quest for fascinating detail and adventure wherever he roamed, whether on two feet or two wheels. 'A Traveller's Life' chronicles the incredible adventures of one of the best-loved tour guides in the history of travel writing.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 4 mentions

3 sur 3
Not an autobiography as such, but an interesting collection of short pieces that fill in some of the gaps between Newby's other autobiographical works. There must be at least two different versions of this book around, as mine (UK paperback, 1983) doesn't contain the piece on building a folly that celephicus is so enthusiastic about.

The selection includes some very nice bits of writing, but there are also a few rather dull makeweights (e.g. the rather tedious opening piece that simply summarises the contents of the Times for the day he was born in 1919). Highspots for me include the pieces on Harrods and on the London sewers, as well as the essay on not meeting Evelyn Waugh. Among the more exotic bits, "Love among the ruins" is an entertaining description of a rather unlikely military operation in the Levant, and the pieces about Istanbul, Lawrence's Jordan and the Sinai monastery are also well worth a read. ( )
  thorold | Aug 18, 2012 |
Worth buying just for the first account: a tale of Newby's (man & long-suffering wife) decision to build a folly, a structure in a garden that usually incorporates water & maritime themes, combines with useless ornamentation and absolutely no purpose. Newby bought a copy of "Follies & Grottoes", a modern guide to the English folly, and proceeeded to visit as many as he could, then engaged a local mason to build one. An man entertainingly described as "able to do anything with stone but bend it"! Hilarious, including an encounter with a local threatening to report them for taking pebbles from the beach between high & low water, a region subject to very special & ancient laws.
I haven't even read the rest of the book, but anything else will be a bobus on top of the first tale.
1 voter celephicus | Feb 27, 2011 |
I adore Eric Newby. This book takes us back to the beginning and tells us how Newby became the travel writer he did. ( )
  saliero | Jun 14, 2007 |
3 sur 3
Agreeably miscellaneous episodes from the life of British travel-writer Newby, who has gone into more autobiographical (and scenic) detail in such memoirs as Something Wholesale, The Last Grain Race, and A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush. Starting out with a bird's-eye look at the world on his 12/6/19 birthday, "That Saturday, if the weather had allowed, one could have flown to Paris or Brussels in one of the new Handley Page Commercial Aeroplanes, at a cost of £15 single fare."
ajouté par John_Vaughan | modifierKirkus (Apr 9, 1982)
 
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A chronicle of travels, some homely some exotic, from the man who can make a schoolboy holiday in Swanage as colourful as a walk in the Hindu Kush. Eric Newby's life of travel began in 1919, on pram-ride adventures with his mother into the dark streets of Barnes and the chaotic jungles of Harrods, and progressed to solo, school-bound adventures around the slums of darkest Hammersmith. His interest piqued, Newby's wanderlust snowballed, and his adventures multiplied, as he navigated the London sewer system, bicycled to Italy and meandered the wilds of New York's Broadway. Whether travelling abroad as a high-fashion buyer for a British department store or for pure adventure as a travel writer, even when reluctantly participating in a tiger shoot in India, Newby chronicles his adventures with verve, humour and infectious enthusiasm. After nine years as the travel editor for the Observer, Newby reluctantly gave up the post, eschewing the new form of human-as-freight travel. However, this change was certainly no pity for his readers, as the latter-day Newby continued on his unwavering quest for fascinating detail and adventure wherever he roamed, whether on two feet or two wheels. 'A Traveller's Life' chronicles the incredible adventures of one of the best-loved tour guides in the history of travel writing.

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