Voyage by Dhow

Voyage by Dhow

by NormanLewis (Author)

Synopsis

From the Russian Steppes, via the Yemen, to Naples, Paraguay and beyond, Norman Lewis has yet to find a place not worth visiting.

Whether describing dancing executioners, burial rites in Western Mexico, or the eponymous voyage by dhow, Lewis's writing brings the world, in all its complexity, vividly to life. His words combine the poetic with the more prosaic, blending first-hand experience with snatches of conversation, and enriching colourful description with historical information. Moreover, Lewis is never afraid to tackle the controversial issues other -- lesser -- writers might shy away from: politics, economics, the problems of tourism. In his hands (and words), the world is at once rendered small enough that we can gain insights into lives, people and places that we could previously only have imagined, and at the same time, made much, much larger.

Graham Greene thought him 'one of our best writers, not of any particular decade but of our century' -- VOYAGE BY DHOW proves Norman Lewis to be one of the best writers of this century -- and, indeed, this millennium -- too.

'The travel-writer's travel-writer' Conde Nast Traveller

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Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Edition: Main Market
Publisher: Picador
Published: 07 Nov 2003

ISBN 10: 0330412094
ISBN 13: 9780330412094

Media Reviews
'The travel-writer's travel-writer' Conde Nast Traveller
Author Bio
Norman Lewis was born in London. The author of thirteen novels and fourteen works of non-fiction, he died in 2003.