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A Year in the World: Journeys of A Passionate Traveller by Frances Mayes
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A Year in the World: Journeys of A Passionate Traveller

by Frances Mayes

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45469,649 (3.47)4
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Broadway (2007), Paperback, 448 pages

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An Amazon review I wish I'd read before I bought this book summarized my opinion of Mayes' travel writing: the writer criticized the discrepancy between the title and the substance:

"A year spent unmoored -- from home and errands and work and the ties that bind -- would have yielded a very different sort of book from this. These trips -- house rentals, hotel stays, even a cruise -- represent a series of vacations, instead of the year-long quest that the title promises."

In short, it's neither a *year* in the world nor a year truly *in* the world - a series of vacations bookended in real life aren't truly a year in the world any more than cruises and four-star hotels are an honest way of experiencing another locale.

Mayes shows us "rich" travel, rich in the sense of expense and not experience -- time spent sampling hotels, food, art, all the finer things, but not time intermingling, exploring. I bought this book while becoming aware of the prickles of my own wanderlust and was very disappointed by how little Mayes seemed to fit her own descriptor of "passionate traveler," but then, our ideas of travel are different.

It's true that she writes beautifully, lyrically, but I'm not interested in what she has to say. ( )
swimparallel | Feb 7, 2009 |  
Staccato - No story, Just Description - And yet, this book resonates in my life. I feel like I found a kindred spirit, a mentor perhaps.

It's not just a travel book, but a philosophy of life, or perhaps a guide to writing. Mayes describes travel as a quest.

"Cultural analysis had begun. What makes them the way they are? That question is at the tap-root of my travel quests. How do place and character intertwine? Could I feel at home here? What is home to those around me? Who are they in their homes, those mysterious others?"

And, I see now that,

"The transforming angel: you go out, far out, and when you return, you have the power to transform your life. Roads always lead to Rome/Home." ( )
smbmom | Aug 26, 2008 |  
This book didn't lend itself to much discussion in bookclub, but I enjoyed the reading and the insight into how to meaningfully travel. Reminded me of Least Heat Moon's Blue Highways, which changed the way my family and I travel. cp ( )
Bibliofemmes | Jan 10, 2008 |  
Jan 2008
whitehallgreatreads | Jan 5, 2008 |  
Inspired by the book I read written by Phra Peter Pannapadipo and Rev. Joseph H. Maier, I decided to take a closer look at Thailand by paying a visit during this Songkran. I’ve bought this book along to Bangkok in hope that at the end of my visit, it could inspire me to write a travelogue.

This book has 417 pages but I could only endure the boredom till page 72, which is the first chapter of the book. In this chapter the author talks about her account in Andalucía. She failed to bring the readers into the whole story. It is clear that she enjoyed herself there but she has to remember that the readers are expecting the same enjoyment while reading it. Her writing is lack of some spice in it. Travelogue should be simple but yet adventurous so that those who had never been there could build their imagination. Meanwhile, this author crammed all the information into the book and it’s too messy with unrelated information, for instance, she constantly brings up some poet’s work, her first marriage, etc. Readers did not expect all these irrelevant considerations in a travelogue. A reader looks forward for a journey to a foreign land when they pick up a travel writing. But they can’t absorb too much foreign information because it’s simply foreign to them. I believe the author failed in many aspects while writing this book. She’s merely recording all her thoughts and her activities in this book without taking account of readers expectation.

There are also too many tapas in her account. I’m getting sick of tapas.

http://reading-now.blogspot.com/2007/... ( )
jerine | Aug 15, 2007 |  
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0767910052, Hardcover)

The author who unforgettably captured the experience of starting a new life in Tuscany in bestselling travel memoirs expands her horizons to immerse herself—and her readers—in the sights, aromas, and treasures of twelve new special places.

A Year in the World is vintage Frances Mayes—a celebration of the allure of travel, of serendipitous pleasures found in unlikely locales, of memory woven into the present, and of a joyous sense of quest. An ideal travel companion, Frances Mayes brings to the page the curiosity of an intrepid explorer, remarkable insights into the wonder of the everyday, and a compelling narrative style that entertains as it informs.

With her beloved Tuscany as a home base, Mayes travels to Spain, Portugal, France, the British Isles, and to the Mediterranean world of Turkey, Greece, the South of Italy, and North Africa. In Andalucía, she relishes the intersection of cultures. She cooks in Portugal, gathers ideas in the gardens of England and Scotland, takes a literary pilgrimage to Burgundy, discovers an ideal place to live in Mantova, and explores the essential Moroccan city of Fez. She rents houses among ordinary residents, shops at neighborhood markets, wanders the back streets, and everywhere contemplates the concept of home. While in Greece, she follows the classic Homeric voyage across the Aegean, lives in a bougainvillea-draped stone house in Crete, and then drives deep into the Mani. In Turkey with friends, she sails the ancient coast, hiking to archaeological sites and snorkeling over sunken Byzantine towns. Weaving together personal perceptions and informed commentary on art, architecture, history, landscape, and social and culinary traditions of each area, Mayes brings the immediacy of life in her temporary homes to the reader. An illuminating and passionate book that will be savored by all who loved Under the Tuscan Sun, A Year in the World is travel writing at its peak.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:24 -0400)

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