Download Travels: Collected Writings, 1950-1993, by Paul Bowles

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Travels: Collected Writings, 1950-1993, by Paul Bowles

Travels: Collected Writings, 1950-1993, by Paul Bowles


Travels: Collected Writings, 1950-1993, by Paul Bowles


Download Travels: Collected Writings, 1950-1993, by Paul Bowles

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Travels: Collected Writings, 1950-1993, by Paul Bowles

Review

“Bowles [is] a writer of power and precision… [TRAVELS] reads like a fable and makes one want to follow in his footsteps.” (Boston Globe)

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From the Back Cover

Inmore than forty essays and articles that range from Paris to Ceylon, Thailand to Kenya, and, of course, Morocco, the great twen-tieth-century American writer encapsulates his long and full life, and sheds light on his brilliant fiction. Whether he’s recalling the cold-water artists’ flats of Paris’s Left Bank or the sun-worshipping eccentrics of Tangier, Paul Bowles imbues every piece with a deep intelligence and the acute perspective of his rich experience of the world. Woven throughout are photographs from the renowned author’s private archive, which place him, his wife, the writer Jane Bowles, and their many friends and compatriots in the landscapes his essays bring so vividly to life. With an introduction by Paul Theroux and a chronology by Daniel Halpern

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Product details

Paperback: 512 pages

Publisher: Ecco; Original edition (August 23, 2011)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9780062067630

ISBN-13: 978-0062067630

ASIN: 006206763X

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 1.3 x 8.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.3 out of 5 stars

20 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#260,078 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

I can say that Paul Bowles is one of my favorite writers and now having read Travels: Collected Writings 1950-1993 (2010), I have finished reading all of his available writings. This collection is mostly made up of pieces that were, collected earlier in, Their Heads Are Green and Their Hands Are Blue (1963). I think if there were that many pieces in a collection by another writer I might have not bothered with the collection or skipped those pieces. But I decided to re-read them and savor the familiarity and evocative scenes described Bowles who has a gift of bringing the atmosphere of a place to life, for example the Sahara Desert in "Baptism of Solitude," as well as the people that populate those specific places, like in "Mustapha and his Friends." There are two excellent pieces about his travels into countryside and mountains of Morocco to record the traditional music there that is some of his best writing in "The Route to Tassemit" and "The Rif, to Music." In those pieces, in particular, he brings Morocco and the inhabitants to life. But he awakened an interest for me in his in his part-time home in Ceylon, that is the subject of "Fishtraps and Private Business." I plan to make a pilgrimage to his private island on my visit there next month. The book is arranged chronologically by editor Mark Ellingham and contains mostly travel pieces but also travel-oriented journals, introductions to photographic books, and even a glossary of kif terms for a 1960s books on cannabis. It includes an introduction by one of my favorite travel writers Paul Theroux as well. I suspect some of the material may have been cannibalized for Bowles' autobiography, Without Stopping, which I also recently read. The earliest pieces are from Bowles early days as a teenager in France-among the 30 uncollected writings spread throughout the book. There were a number of pieces from the now defunct Holiday magazine that were among my favorites as well: "How to Live on a Part-Time Island" (another piece that inspired me to visit Ceylon), "Madeira" (on the isolat4ed Portuguese island), "Window on the Past" (about Spain), as well as several pieces on Morocco and cities in Morocco. I was impressed with pieces about travel in Istanbul ("A Man Must Not Be Very Moslem"), India ("Notes Mailed at Nagercoil), the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya ("Letter from Kenya") as well as a piece about the civil war in neighboring Algeria ("Sad for U.S., Sad for Algeria"). I think the following quote from "Windows on the Past" sums up Bowles' perspective on travel writing: If I am faced with the decision of choosing between visiting a circus and a cathedral, a cafe and a public monument, or a fiesta and a museum, I'm afraid I shall normally take the circus, the cafe, and the fiesta, trusting to luck that I shall manage to see the other s later. I supposed I'm not what today is called culture-minded. Perhaps the that is because the culture of a land at any given moment is the people who live in it and the lives they lead in it, not the possessions they have inherited from those who came before. They may or may not profit by their legacy. If they do, so much the better for them; but whether they do or do not, their culture is represented by them and not by their history.I feel a sort of kinship with Bowles and hope to see as much as he has seen. I can't help but note that he did it so much earlier than others and had to struggle and suffer in order to do so. Bowles was not a fan of progress and I suspect most travel today would have been too tame for his type of adventure lust-very much a trailblazer and original thinker.

"Travels," the collected writings of Paul Bowles' is my first exposure to his writing. I purchased this book as a result of reading Jeff Greenwald's "The Size of the World," where Greenwald is received by Bowles in his home in Tangier and, in their ensuing dialogue, began to take measure of the man. I found it fascinating that Bowles chose to live within a culture where the seeking of solitude is considered an aberrant behavior, a behavior Bowles strongly insisted upon but never verbalized until Greenwald put the reason into print: Bowles has never been able to sleep in the same room with another person..."it's something I could never do, never in my whole life." My objective, when reading a book on travel, is to experience the land, the people, the culture in its fullest dimension through the lens of someone from my own culture. To that end, Bowles delivers. His philosophy on what makes a travel book "is the story of what happened to one person in a particular place" and where "the personality of the author is the decisive element." His accounts are at once poetic, politically astute, and incorporates the dialogue and cultural habits of the inhabitants while directing the reader to conclusions that conform to his informative opinion. While some readers argue that the repetitiveness of this book of collective writings is its downfall, I found the repetitiveness helpful in that it replayed the images of earlier chapters, images I hope to see for myself since Morocco is on my bucket list.

Wonderful to have his many travel essays gathered from various sources and arranged chronologically. That unique blend of romance and reality that distinguishes Bowles from so many other travel writers is still refreshing after all these years. He was the last of a generation, and this collection allows us to follow him back over the course of an amazing life.

Great travel writer, without trying to be one. His prose and character descriptions are flawless. I read it quickly and became addicted to his writing.

And Bowles’s pieces on Morocco over many years gave me a Morocco in prose that I truly appreciated. Enjoyed his insight on music in particular.

A riveting writer in the Beat era. He writes of travel adventures from Sri Lanka to Kenya to Morocco. Inspired me to view the nineties film from his novel set in Morocco, The Sheltering Sky.

Terric travel writing. Wonderfully observant and imaginative.

If you have ever yearned to read another great Paul Bowles book but knew it was not to be, than I recommend you go on a travel with him to the most exotic parts of our world. Through the eyes and sensibilities of Mr. Bowles I felt the stirrings of danger in Morocco, Ceylon and even So. America. As an American Paul Bowles traveled extensively to learn about himself and put it on the page for us all to experience. Please don't miss this one.

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