Video Night in Kathmandu

Video Night in Kathmandu

by PicoIyer (Author)

Synopsis

When Pico Iyer began his travels, he wanted to know how Rambo conquered Asia. Why did Dire Straits blast out over Hiroshima, Bruce Springsteen over Bali and Madonna over all? If he was eager to learn where East meets West, how pop culture and imperialism penetrated through the world's most ancient civilisations, then the truths he began to uncover were more startling, more subtle, more complex than he ever anticipated. Who was hustling whom? When did this pursuit of illusions and vested interests, with it's curious mix of innocence and calculation, turn from confrontation into the mating dance? Iyer travelled to Bali where despite tourism he realised that Paradise might not be lost after all. He checked on how Tibet was faring as the word's last secret to be revealed to full view. In Nepal, he saw how the Dharma path met Freak Street, and witnessed in China how doors locked to trade were thrown open with breathless courtesy. This is a world where the movie star has become a god and Rajiv Gandhi a celluloid hero, and to travel with Iyer is to experience the seductions and ironies of today's Asian cultures - and our own.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 416
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 2001

ISBN 10: 0747551200
ISBN 13: 9780747551201
Book Overview: 'A wild and wonderful tour through the Westernised East' ANITA DESAI 'Marvellously enjoyable' WILLIAM BOYD 'As much a document of the eighties as BONFIRE OF THE VANITIES' LITERARY REVIEW

Media Reviews
Quick-witted and perceptive...something more than a deft and entertaining traveler's tale. -- The New Yorker
The book is filled with Iyer's enthusiasms and opinions, both engaging and provocative, and is...a sensual feast of rich impressions. -- Los Angeles Times
A fresh approach, embellished by the author's humorous and perceptive style. -- San Francisco Chronicle
Mohawk haircuts in Bali. Yuppies in Hong Kong. In Bombay, not one but five Rambo rip-offs, complete with music and dancing. And in the new People's Republic of China, a restaurant that serves dishes called Yes, Sir, Cheese My Baby, A Legitimate Beef, and Ike and Tuna Turner. These are some of the images -- comical, poignant, and unsettling -- that Pico Iyer brings back from the Far East in this brilliant book of travel reportage. A writer for Time, Iyer approaches his subject with a camera-sharp eye, a style that suggests a cross between Paul Theroux and Hunter Thompson, and a willingness to go beyond the obvious conclusions about the hybrid cultures of East and West.