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Indlæser... The Best American Travel Writing 2000af Bill Bryson, Jason Wilson (Series Editor)
![]() Ingen Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. ![]() ![]() I chose to read this book as we were travelling from Winnipeg to Colorado and Utah for our 2011 annual vacation. The twenty-five short pieces were chosen from all the travel writing published in 1999 to represent the interesting field of writing about journeys. Reading these pieces from the perspective of 12 years later some of them seem dated. The one piece set in Canada is about Nunavut, the new territory created from the Northwest Territory in 1999. The writer, William T. Vollmann, worries about the future of the territory and how the Inuit will adapt to increasing tourism. Twelve years later I can assure him that Nunavut is doing quite well although I’m sure it has changed from what he saw then and in the years previous. I can’t be sure because, like many Canadians, I’ve never been in any of our territories even though I’ve been through each province. The concern about how tourism changes the country it seeks to explore was expressed by a number of the writers. Tony Perrottet, in Zoned on Zanzibar, talked about Zanzibar’s government “banking on balmy weather, tropical reefs and mile after mile of heartbreakingly beautiful beaches” to “fix …its development blues.” In the Two Faces of Tourism Jonathan Tourtellot muses about how tourism will change the Copper Canyon in Mexico. Patrick Symmes wanders through Cambodia looking for the Khmer Rouge Tourism Minister and considers how “The Wonderful People who Brought you the Killing Fields” will market the country for tourism. (Several years ago my nephew was in Cambodia and did actually tour the killing fields so it has come to pass.) Interestingly, although there are a number of articles set in Africa, Asia and Europe, several in North America and Central America, and one in Australia, there are none from South America. Maybe no-one was travelling to South America then or maybe there were no well-written pieces about South America but it seems a strange lack. Certainly lots of people I know have been to South America and there are lots of exotic places to visit there. It would be interesting to know if the next year South America received the overdue attention it deserves. I would recommend many but not all of the pieces in this book. Nantucket on my Mind by David Halberstam was no more than a complaint about the “new” people who were buying up property on the island and despoiling it. Seems to me that several decades ago other people probably would have made the same complaint about him. There’s bound to be some articles other readers will like in this compilation. I hope you enjoy! ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
This inaugural edition of THE BEST AMERICAN TRAVEL WRITING journeys around the world to reveal our fascination with places both familiar and foreign. Guest editor Bill Bryson has gathered together remarkable pieces that travel across the remote stretches of Bhutan, along the busy roads of Cuba, and into the far-flung corners of Cambodia. Whether an account of an overnight stay in Central Park or the story of a hilarious ice golf tournament in Greenland, the selections in THE BEST AMERICAN TRAVEL WRITING 2000 exhibit the diversity and creative wonder of travel writing today. No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)818.5408Literature English (North America) Authors, American and American miscellany 20th Century 1945-1999 ProseLC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:![]()
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