Fakirs, Feluccas and Femmes Fatales: Tales from an incidental traveller (Bradt Travel Guides (Travel Literature))

Fakirs, Feluccas and Femmes Fatales: Tales from an incidental traveller (Bradt Travel Guides (Travel Literature))

by ETLaing (Author)

Synopsis

This is a unique collection of brief encounters and adventures from working in seventy countries - a kaleidoscope of landscapes, sounds, smells, politics, humour dialogue and, above all, people. E T Laing recounts episodes that include a Chinese Red Guard reminiscing about the day her parents were hauled in front of her to be sentenced; unreconstructed Russian apparatchiks; and sailors on a Turkmenistan ferry knocking back vodka. A warts-and-all account of the author's travels, with disasters and miseries alongside the high points, he takes you to danger zones, wars of startling savagery in Sierra Leone, Pakistan and Angola, coups and dubious elections. He narrowly avoids death in India, Mexico and Nigeria. In other episodes he simply savours the pleasures of travelling alone. As the author says, 'Nothing sharpens the understanding more than seeing things done ten different ways in ten different countries.'

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Publisher: Bradt Travel Guides
Published: 03 Jul 2012

ISBN 10: 184162439X
ISBN 13: 9781841624396

Media Reviews
'...ideal for those with an avid interest in travelling, politics or history. Laing's work can only be described as an occasional but very enjoyable read. Essentially, if you've used up your air miles for 2012, this book is the ideal armchair travel read to take you on a metaphorical holiday.' Hampstead and Highgate Express '... a good choice for a commute.... some tales of note are 'Nigeria' and 'The Taj Mahal Intercontinental Mumbai' ...sure to grip you wherever you happen to read them. E.T. Laing proves that every port has a story - and each one of them worth telling.' Wanderlust magazine
Author Bio
ET Laing's career in ports and shipping has taken him around the world for over forty years. Educated at Oxford University he lives with his family in London.