Customer Reviews:
Enjoyable stories July 2, 2008 Thubron undertakes a spiritual and physical quest along the once commercial highway of the Silk Road from China across Central Asia and Iran to Turkey. Along this three-part journey, he plunges the reader into history, archeology, mythology, religions, and peoples whose genetic and cultural blending do not conform with political boundaries. Through artifacts like beautifully glinting faience or tile, the,often glorious, past is rediscovered through seeking out clues. In this trip of discovery, Thubron determinedly scales sheer cliffs with his fingernails, treads through villages and across rivulets to recover evidence of past civilizations in murals, tiles, minarets, chiseled-out caves, and more. He risks life and limb brushing against the SARS epidemic in China and passing through the territory ruled by thieves and unscrupulous guards in Afghanistan and in the Oxus. His good fortune is bolstered by his experience with local languages and with the region from a trip made twelve years ago during Soviet control and by his historical, political, religious, and mythological knowledge. The reader is given many facts and surprises, such as the longest epic's being the MANAS rather than the ODYSSEY. As he traverses the road, he tells the reader about the cities then and now and about conversations with their residents. An interesting story is his visit to a Moslem shrine during a crowded holiday. Such a proscribed visit by a non-Moslem requires escaping detection as the crowds press him forward; unexpectedly he is tugged gently along as a guest (pp 264-67, 270-72). Another good story is set in Tehran where he interviews an artsy youth with a film (pp. 284-93). Another is in Maragheh, where the draining of an inflamed abscess is a four-hour doubtful ordeal with dentists who do not speak his languages. Not least is the story of his surpise visit to an English language college in Tabriz where its female students ask questions of him and practice English. Not only does the author bring the Silk Road to light for the reader, a busy network bearing silk, printing, goods and ideas between the Pacific and the Mediterranean, he is also relating life along the Silk Road today, as these places might not receive many tourists. So, this travel memoir is both memorable and necessary.
Shadow of the Silk Road May 5, 2008 Another great travel adventure By Colin Thurbon. I felt transported along with Thurbon as he tranversed the Silk Road. His references to past trips as well as history, provoked a need to research more about this part of this world. An excellent book. A must for those interested in China, Central Asia and World History.
Slogging along in the Shadows of the Silk Road March 8, 2008 13 out of 17 found this review helpful
Barren landscapes, indigenous people desperate to leave; temples and monuments crumbling in ruin and the author covers it all in three hundred and forty four pages of barren text leaving the reader desperate to leave the book. Traveling the Silk Road could have been a fascinating adventure but this book offers no insight, portrays no curiousity as to why things are they way they are and if you can make it to the end of the journey you have endured!There are numerous better sources of first hand accounts of adventure travel in these regions. It is simply too hard to find kind words, a compliment, or a recommendation for this book.
Good, but not great January 26, 2008 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
I bought this book hoping to get a good idea of what the people and places are like along The Silk Road. This book has some very interesting interviews with people along the way, but after a while, it these become less frequent and the book is more about "I came here and saw this. It looked like this. It made me feel like this, then I left and went here." I could have bought another book with pictures of the Silk Road and been better off in this regard. To me, the best part of the book was what he learned talking to people. Unfortunately, that makes up only a small part of his journey. Not a bad book, and I don't have regrets buying it, but I did start to look forward to finishing it so I could move on to the next one.
A rare beauty January 10, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I heard an interview of the author on NPR and his clarity, passion, and humanity led me straight to the library.
I have not been the least disappointed in this beautiful book, which is not so much a travel book to me, but a book about thousands of years of fragile human perceptions both tragic and beautiul. It forced my own introspection as much as it tells a story of a world I have never experienced. This is a book I will buy prior to reading it again.
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