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enlarge | Author: Sara Wheeler Publisher: Abacus Category: Book
List Price: $18.60 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $18.59 (100%)
Used (10) from $0.01
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 1857305
Media: Paperback Pages: 320 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 0.9
ISBN: 0349105847 Dewey Decimal Number: 910 EAN: 9780349105840 ASIN: 0349105847
Publication Date: January 3, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Some wear on book from reading, spine creases, wear on binding and pages.
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| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 6-6 of 6 | | « PREV | | |
Planes, Trains, and Stereotypes February 20, 2006 8 out of 15 found this review helpful
This is one of those books that you keep reading for the promise of things to come...but it never delivers. The idea of accompanying the writer on her travels from north to south in "a thin country" is a compelling one. Unfortunately, the writing is not.
The writer spends a great deal of the book writing about the trials and travails in getting from point A to point B, never fully focusing on the beauty of the destination or the people. How can you write about a Chile and fail to convey the sense of incomparable beauty that most travelers see?
Now, I understand that there are travel writers who write about the journey and not the destination. So this could have been one of those humorous, roll-with-the-punches travel tales. But it wasn't that either. Instead,the journey stories were tedious and sounded a lot like complaining.
To the book's credit, a great deal of Chilean history is interspersed throughout the book, but this, too, ends ups sounding like a high school textbook. Prosaic and repetitive, the history offered never comes to life.
But I hate to give up on a book, so I slogged through 3/4 of it, riding along from the northern reaches of Atacama all the way to Antarctica. And, then, this:
"Each country transports its culture to the bottom of the world when it sets up in Antarctica - the good and the bad. In Bellinghausen the piles of rubbish, the acres of mud, the puffy faced men with silver teeth, the ghostly outlines of the metal letters CCCP which had been clumsily jimmied off the doors, the abandoned machinery of failed scientific projects, the one minuscule and inadequate Lada - well, they were Russian all right."
Up until now I've generally thought of most travelers as an enlightened bunch, people who can see beyond cultural stereotypes...but this writer managed to cram every available negative Russian stereotype into one telling sentence. Telling, because it revealed more about the writer, in my opinion, than Russian culture.
And, come to think of it, there were quite a few negative comments about the Chilean people as well. They were frequently referred to as insecure and self-obsessed.
This is when I decided to throw in the towel. This was one journey I no longer wanted to participate in.
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