Today’s team review is from Liz, she blogs here https://lizannelloyd.wordpress.com/
Liz has been reading PassIonate Travellers by Trisha Nicholson
Recounting the story of 21 epic journeys, made by a panoply of individuals through known time, is quite a challenge. How should they be sorted? Do they share a common purpose? Can we learn from their experiences? Trish Nicholson had chosen to group the journeys according to the geographical region they visited, with each section introduced by a Perspective giving the reader a picture of the area’s context within society at the time of the travellers described. Each person had different reasons to set out; curiosity, greed, a mission, a need for challenge, but all were surprised. The sketch maps of each journey are a great asset, however knowledgeable (or not) you may be of the 21st century world.
This is a book of choices. Do you seek out the names which are familiar, such as Herodotus, Mungo Park or Robert Louis Stevenson, do you choose to follow the brave journeys of the women who endured discomfort to find new experiences or do you read from the beginning to the end? All approaches are rewarding, but I admit to skipping first to some of my favourites such as Gladys Aylward, whom I’ve admired since childhood, and Marianne North, whose accurate, beautiful drawings of plants are on show at Kew gardens. Then I discovered amazing journeys made by strangers to me. Ida Pfeiffer’s suffering in order to see most of Iceland, Stevenson’s fascinating tour of the islands of the Pacific Ocean and the anarchic Alexandra David-Neel’s determination to enter the forbidden city of Lhasa, all filled me with awe and admiration, even though many of these people would not be easy companions.
I shall be buying Passionate Travellers as a present for friends who love journeys or who find people intriguing. Its fluent prose and detailed account of the world of the past are irresistible.
Accompanying these 21 passionate travellers on their personal quests, we discover what drove them, and share their incredible journeys through deserts, mountains, jungles and seas to every continent, spanning 2,000 years of history from 480 BCE to the 1930s. These are true stories of daring adventure, courage, cunning, even murder and, above everything, sheer determination against all odds.
Most of these eight women and thirteen men were ordinary people transformed by their journeys. They travelled from Africa, China, Persia, Russia, and the Mediterranean as well as from Europe and America. Their backgrounds were diverse, including: poet, artist, invalid, slave, pilgrim, doctor, missionary, scholar, diplomat, dilettante, storyteller, and anarchistic opera singer.
This sounds a fascinating blend of history, travel and biography. Travel for most of us today involves getting to an airport, hanging around a lot, being cramped into a tiny space. We complain but its nothing compared to the discomforts and dangers of some of the travellers in previous decades/centuries
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Clever idea for a book! Traveling before planes, trains and automobiles was not to be lightly undertaken! But then I think the world then was enjoyed more personally, rather than flying by or over.
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Wowww! This sounds like a really good book to read! Thank you for sharing and reviewing it!
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I loved this book too, Liz. I was in awe of many of these travellers, especially the women! A great review!
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