De grenzeloze rivier: verhalen uit het rijk van de Rijn
by Mathijs Deen
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The Boundless River takes the reader into a unique world ? the twilight zone between fact and fiction, science and imagination ? and on a journey which moves effortlessly from a time in prehistory, long before the existence of a European continent, to the present day. Along the way Deen encounters paleontologists, geologists, museum curators, taxidermists, fishermen and skippers who work the boats, who still see the Rhine as a living entity.From the mighty hippos that grazed its banks show more millions of years ago, to the weary salmon that saw their habitat slowly change and the aurochs that grazed its shores; from the primordial Steinheim Woman to the Roman general Corbulo who commanded settlements along its delta, to a young Goethe: in all of their stories the Rhine is ever present, sometimes as the main character, sometimes as an extra, as a theatre of war, a border between nations, a bathing spot, a killer, a vital transport route.Beautifully fluid, rich and captivating, The Boundless River shows how the Rhine connects and divides, terrifies, comforts, carries and swallows, and has done since the beginning of time.Translated from the Dutch by Jane Hedley-Prole and Jonathan Reeder show lessTags
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Whilst he was planning to write about the river Rhine, Deen was warned by a passing paleogeographer not to fall into the common trap of thinking of a river in purely linear terms — a source, a bed, and a mouth — but to understand that every river is a drainage system defined chiefly by its catchment area, in which the course of the main bed at any given moment is purely incidental. In the case of the Rhine, that means looking at a big area of north-west Europe: all of Luxembourg and Liechtenstein, large chunks of Germany, Switzerland, Belgium, France and the Netherlands, and even parts of Austria. If you draw it on a map and you have the right kind of imagination, it looks a little bit like a skating bear. Apparently.
Been puts show more together a collage of interesting vignettes to give us an impression of what this means in physical, cultural, economic, political and spiritual terms — timelapse accounts of the geological formation of the area; journalistic impressions of its scope (the village at the easternmost point of the catchment area, Bischofsgrün, is famous for building a giant snowman each year to celebrate Carnival; at the westernmost point is Ors, where Wilfred Owen was killed a few days before the Armistice in 1918); imaginative reconstructions of incidents in Roman and Carolingian times; the river as a frontier and as a transport artery; the culture of river-bathing and the use of drowning as a means of execution; an eccentric Swiss family that lived on an isolated peninsula in the Upper Rhine Gorge; St Willibrord converting the Frisians; a couple of Swiss entrepreneurs who brought an Irish light-vessel to Basel to make into a concert venue; the Roman general Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo building a canal between the northern and southern mouths of the river. And so on. It sounds like a terrible mish-mash, but it actually works very well: Deen is a lively and versatile writer and he manages to create a unity between the very diverse subjects and moods of these stories. show less
Been puts show more together a collage of interesting vignettes to give us an impression of what this means in physical, cultural, economic, political and spiritual terms — timelapse accounts of the geological formation of the area; journalistic impressions of its scope (the village at the easternmost point of the catchment area, Bischofsgrün, is famous for building a giant snowman each year to celebrate Carnival; at the westernmost point is Ors, where Wilfred Owen was killed a few days before the Armistice in 1918); imaginative reconstructions of incidents in Roman and Carolingian times; the river as a frontier and as a transport artery; the culture of river-bathing and the use of drowning as a means of execution; an eccentric Swiss family that lived on an isolated peninsula in the Upper Rhine Gorge; St Willibrord converting the Frisians; a couple of Swiss entrepreneurs who brought an Irish light-vessel to Basel to make into a concert venue; the Roman general Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo building a canal between the northern and southern mouths of the river. And so on. It sounds like a terrible mish-mash, but it actually works very well: Deen is a lively and versatile writer and he manages to create a unity between the very diverse subjects and moods of these stories. show less
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ThingScore 100
Dat schrijver en radiomaker Mathijs Deen een verbluffend goede verteller is bewees hij al eerder met zijn boeken en radioreportage. Maar mocht je nog enige twijfel hebben, De grenzeloze rivier is het definitieve bewijs van schrijverschap. Op zeer boeiende wijze vertelt hij over de rol die de rivier De Rijn speelt in de geschiedenis. Door te kiezen voor een combinatie van reisverhalen en show more geschiedenis met een fleugje wetenschap ontstaat er een caleidoscopisch beeld van de rivier die zo bepalend is voor ons land en eigenlijk voor geheel Noordwest-Europa…lees verder > show less
added by Jordaan
Author Information
Awards and Honors
Awards
Common Knowledge
- Original title
- De grenzeloze rivier
- Original publication date
- 2021
- Important places
- Rhine River
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, History, Travel, General Nonfiction, Science & Nature
- DDC/MDS
- 943.4 — History & geography History of Europe Central Europe: Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Czech, Poland, Hungary Southwestern Germany
- LCC
- DD801 .R744 .D4413 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania Germany History of Germany Local history and description States, provinces, regions, etc., A-Z
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 91
- Popularity
- 351,508
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (4.00)
- Languages
- Dutch, English, German, Italian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 1



























































