Description |
ix, 205 pages ; 23 cm |
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regular print |
Contents |
I Always Wanted to Go to Patagonia -- A Place to Hang Your Hat -- A Tower in Tuscany -- Gone to Timbuctoo -- Milk -- The Attractions of France -- The Estate of Maximilian Tod -- Bedouins -- Letter to Tom Maschler -- The Nomadic Alternative -- It's a nomad nomad world -- Abel the Nomad -- The Anarchists of Patagonia -- The Road to the Isles -- Variations on an Idee Fixe -- Among the Ruins -- The Morality of Things |
Summary |
Such a view overlooks the fact that from the late 1960s onward Chatwin was already fashioning the tools of his future trade in the columns of a variety of magazines and journals. And that he continued to do so through every twist and turn of his career, from art expert to archaeologist, to journalist and author, right up until his death in 1989. These previously neglected or unpublished pieces - short stories, travel sketches, essays, articles, and criticism - gathered together here for the first time, cover every period and aspect of the writer's career, and reflect the abiding themes of his work: roots and rootlessness, exile and the exotic, possession and renunciation |
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It is commonly supposed that Bruce Chatwin was an ingenuous latecomer to the profession of letters, a misapprehension given apparent credence by that now famous passage in his lyrical, autobiographical "I Always Wanted to Go to Patagonia," in which we are told that this indefatigable traveler's literary career began in midstride, almost on a whim, with a telegram announcing his departure for the farthest-flung corner of the globe: "Have gone to Patagonia." |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 193-204) |
Subject |
Chatwin, Bruce, 1940-1989 -- Travel.
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Author |
Borm, Jan.
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Graves, Matthew.
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LC no. |
96003003 |
ISBN |
0670868590 (acid-free paper) |
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