March 06, 2003
Nicholas Howe on the connection between travel reading and travel writing
"For as long as people have been writing about their journeys, they have been telling tales of the strange and the wondrous, of the tedious and the annoying, of the signs of past grandeur, of the petty nuisances of travel, of their encounters with danger, of their romances with strangers, of their moments of doubt at having ventured from home, of their distaste for the nasty food and the repellent natives. The names of places change, the conveyances become faster, the duration of the journey grows briefer -- but the most accomplished travel writers know that the stories they tell follow the same patterns as did the stories heard or read centuries before, the stories that made them leave home in the first place."
--Nicholas Howe, "Book Passages" The New Republic, August 6, 2001
Note: This quote was a bright spot in Howe's otherwise tedious essay, which disparaged all modern travel writing (including my own essay, "Storming the Beach") in one broad stroke. I refer to his article, as well as a few other classic "travel writing is dead" treatises, in an earlier blog entitled "Long Die Travel Writing!"
Posted by Rolf on March 6, 2003 08:53 AMIs this the same Nick Howe who teaches at Ohio State and used to teach at Oklahoma? "Tedious" hardly BEGINS to describe him and his writing. I know this man, and not only is he tedious, but devious as well.
Posted by: Miles Standish on March 22, 2005 03:08 PMBook Release and Tour Diary
Catching up with my magazine reading
Essays
Feedback
From the international affairs quote-file
From the Paris writing workshop
Readings from Around the 'Net
Readings from the book world
Relics from the road
Rolf's News and Updates
Travel Advice
Travel Quote of the Day
Writings by my nephew Cedar, who is 4
The Tragedy of Fernando and Rosita: A lesson in story structure
Stanley Stewart on what makes good travel writing
A few notes on Third World urban slums
Pico Iyer on the merits of shoestring travel
More feedback from Vagabonding readers
As good a reason as any for not postponing your travels
Goodbye, Wichita
Roger Sandall on the delusions of 'romantic primitivism'
The joys of an open-ended journey
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