Ratings2
Average rating4.5
Reviews with the most likes.
I realise that this, along with the others in this trilogy, are considered classic, and are thought by many readers to set the bar for travel writing - but for me, I didn't find it hard to put down.
At the start PLF points out that Books about this part of Europe incline to be chiefly, sometimes exclusively, devoted to politics, and thus abundance lessens my guilt about how small a part they play in this one, where they only appear when they impinge directly on the journey.”
For me, it felt like this book outlined significant politics and history - and as I am the first to admit - my knowledge and understanding of this part of Europe is negligible - I was constantly baffled with who the many people were, and what was going on. For me it felt like this was a massive part of the book, and I found it a real battle not to skip forward.
Those parts which concentrated on the journey, and the interactions with the people he met on the way were great, and I am sure for those with a grounding in the history or Hungary & Romania would have enjoyed this read much more than me.
I don't have a copy of the third book of this trilogy, but I will keep an eye out for it, and will read it to complete the journey.
Superb. If I thought that A Time of Gifts was a great book this may be a touch more compelling and deserves all superlative thrown at it by the critics. It is hard not to be envious of Patrick Leigh Fermor, a life that was adventurous beyond anything that the average person could comprehend. It is not the famous events that make me envious though, it is the seeing of a world that no longer exists. His travels in Hungary and Romania took in a world that was pounded to non existent pulp by Nazism a few short years later. We can even add at the (bitter) end of this book the eventual submergence of Ada Kelah and all the other places of interest when the Iron Gates dam was built in 1970. He writes a short final appendix at the end lamenting the loss. Onto the The Broken Road. I look forward to the conclusion of a young man's great adventure.
Books
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Series
3 primary booksTrilogy is a 3-book series with 3 primary works first released in 195 with contributions by Yōko Tawada, Margaret Mitsutani, and Patrick Leigh Fermor.