Travel writing Books

3022 products


  • Books on Demand Hongkong lieben lernen: Der perfekte Reiseführer

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £12.31

  • Books on Demand Straßburg lieben lernen: Der perfekte Reiseführer

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £13.18

  • 15 in stock

    £12.83

  • Books on Demand Marrakesch lieben lernen: Der perfekte

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £11.97

  • Books on Demand Palermo lieben lernen: Der perfekte Reiseführer

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £12.31

  • Books on Demand Wie Gott in Bielefeld: Der luxuriöse Reiseführer

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £20.80

  • 15 in stock

    £7.99

  • 15 in stock

    £25.55

  • BoD - Books on Demand Solotravel

    1 in stock

    1 in stock

    £16.72

  • 1 in stock

    £16.65

  • 450 Years of the Spanish Riding School

    ACC 450 Years of the Spanish Riding School

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis is the only authorised anniversary volume on 450 years of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna. A must-have for equestrian enthusiasts.

    2 in stock

    £46.75

  • Sorry Siracusa

    SORRY PRESS Sorry Siracusa

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £18.00

  • Spector Books Überfahrt

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £19.80

  • Japanese Traditions: Rice Cakes, Cherry Blossoms

    Tuttle Publishing Japanese Traditions: Rice Cakes, Cherry Blossoms

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisPacked with colorful illustrations and fun facts about Japanese culture, celebrations, language and history, this multicultural children's books will delight children and parents alike!A wonderful look at Japanese culture and family life, Japanese Traditions is an intricately illustrated romp through the childhood reminiscences of author/illustrator Setsu Broderick. Told via a series of short text blocks and lighthearted illustrations based on cats, Japanese Traditions displays seasonal festivals and activities such as O-Bon (Festival of the Souls), O-hanami (cherry blossom viewing) and preparing for the New Year.While enjoying the charming illustrations of a family of Japanese cats, the author shares her warm childhood memories of many Japanese customs, such as gathering around the kotatsu (heated table) to stay warm, throwing soybeans to keep away ogres and hanging handmade teru-teru-bozu (fine-weather) dolls out the window to stop the rain. There are also many traditional Japanese foods, toys, games and celebrations taught through the illustrations. All in all, Japanese Traditions provides a magical feast for children of all ages.Trade Review"While the text includes factual information about customs, food, games, festivals, and other cultural topics, the narrative is conversational. Soft, appealing cartoon illustrations of the cuddly, expressive cats dressed in traditional Japanese clothing are full of detail and humor." --School Library Journal"But the real value of this book is the masterful way it combines loads of vocabulary words and customs with the tenderness of the author's memories and the hilarious and busy drawings, making it a treat for both younger and older kids. And for anyone who wonders how life in Japan used to be when people lived closer to the earth, the seasons and each other, this is a sweet, fun, entertaining primer." --The Japan Times"Japanese Traditions is completely charming. Children, parents, and teachers will enjoy perusing the playful illustrations and learning about traditional Japanese culture." --Leslie Swartz, Senior VP, Boston Children's Museum and co-author of Moonbeams, Dumplings & Dragon Boats

    5 in stock

    £12.59

  • Txalaparta, S.L. En Viaje Por Sudamerica

    1 in stock

    1 in stock

    £20.12

  • Humboldt How Do I Imagine Being There?

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    10 in stock

    £23.75

  • 4 in stock

    £28.50

  • Humboldt Hamatli & Patriae

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £26.60

  • 15 in stock

    £19.00

  • Once Upon a Time I Went To . . .: A Stimulating

    BIS Publishers B.V. Once Upon a Time I Went To . . .: A Stimulating

    Book SynopsisTravelling is one of the most exciting things you can do. Getting lost in a beautiful forest or visiting every museum in a city; whatever your idea of a perfect trip is, it will always enrich your life. This book helps you to enjoy your trip to the fullest and gives you the opportunity to write down your favorite new memories.It's perfect for people who love to travel, but want some help exploring. If you want to get more out of your trip, Once Upon a Time I Went is a book they should definitely take with them when they travel.It's a notebook with prompts to make the most of your trip and it's full of questions and assignments to help you explore a new city or country

    £12.34

  • Indian Travel Writing in the Age of Empire:

    Bloomsbury India Indian Travel Writing in the Age of Empire:

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £80.75

  • Venezia: An evocative and atmospheric photo book,

    Meta4Books vzw Venezia: An evocative and atmospheric photo book,

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis love letter in photographs to the unique beauty and mystery of Venice is an evocative compilation of vintage photographs, prints, and ephemera. It is a tactile ode to the sensuality of the city, filled to the brim with all manner of Venetian memorabilia: 19th century photographs, engravings, hand-coloured magic lantern slides, vintage postcards, old luggage labels, keys from long-lost luxury hotels, golden ducats from the 18th century, Carnival ball invitations. With gilt-edged pages and antique Venetian lettering, it is not a travel or walking guide, but an atmospheric pilgrimage that pays homage to this ever-fascinating city. Serge Simonart’s engaging commentary on Venetian history and culture introduces each subject with affection and insight. "Every day, a nervous traveller visiting the City of Doges for the first time asks the best way to get to their hotel. ‘The shortest or the most beautiful?’, I once heard the concierge at Hotel Des Bains ask. The tourist who opted for the most beautiful route is still wandering around the city. This is a unique photobook in which to wander and lose oneself.” - Serge Simonart

    1 in stock

    £31.20

  • Beautiful Jamaica 50th Edition

    LMH Publishing Beautiful Jamaica 50th Edition

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £9.49

  • Franco Maria Ricci Editore Grand Tour of Europe

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £76.80

  • Blackstone Publishing 12 Trips In 12 Months

    Book Synopsis

    £13.49

  • A Journey through Afghanistan

    The University of Chicago Press A Journey through Afghanistan

    Book SynopsisThis volume tells the story of David Chaffetz's experience of Afghanistan shortly before the Soviet invasion. His account is an intimate portrait of the Afghan people and the vast landscape which surrounds them.

    £26.00

  • The Moon Come to Earth

    The University of Chicago Press The Moon Come to Earth

    Book SynopsisFocusing on scenes as broad as a citywide arts festival and as small as a single paving stone in a cobbled walk, this title renders Lisbon from a perspective that varies between wide-eyed and knowing. It reveals the author's struggles with (and love of) the Portuguese language as well as an awkward meeting with Nobel laureate Jose Saramago.Trade Review"A good part of the reason I feel so passionately positive about The Moon, Come to Earth is how well Graham is able to convey his compassionate, generous, and comic spirit to the reader. Unfailingly endearing, whether he's trying to figure the number of cobblestones in Lisbon or trying to find an ATM to buy tickets for a futebol match, Graham becomes the reader's traveling surrogate in the best sense. But this book is as much about parenthood as it is about Portugal, with Graham's daughter Hannah as the most constant figure in the narrative. The portrait of this father-daughter relationship is about as lovely as l've seen." - Robin Hemley, author of Do-Over!"

    £17.66

  • Caucasus  A Journey to the Land Between

    The University of Chicago Press Caucasus A Journey to the Land Between

    Book SynopsisThe rugged land between the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, the Caucasus is the front line of a fascinating and formidable clash of cultures; Russia on one side, the predominantly Muslim mountains on the other.

    £21.00

  • On KnowingThe Natural Sciences Historical Studies

    The University of Chicago Press On KnowingThe Natural Sciences Historical Studies

    Book SynopsisIn this volume, Gorden MacCreagh recounts his adventures with eight "Eminent Scientificos" as they set out to explore the Amazon in 1923 without any idea of what lies ahead of them: rapids, malaria, monkey stew and "dangerous savages".

    £21.00

  • Rome as a Guide to the Good Life A Philosophical

    The University of Chicago Press Rome as a Guide to the Good Life A Philosophical

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review“A delightful and immersive guide to the city of Rome and the philosophical tradition it embodies concerning the good life, or as we would say today, the meaning of life. Travelers seeking ancient wisdom among the city’s famous buildings and works of art could ask for no better companion.” * Donald Robertson, author of 'How to Think Like a Roman Emperor' *“I have been a Roman for over half a century, but I’ll be sure to use Samuelson’s Guide the next time I visit my native city. I will look at it quite differently!” * Massimo Pigliucci, author of 'How to Be a Stoic' *“Rome as a Guide to the Good Life immerses us in glorious works of art and architecture. But in Rome, every aspect of life, from Raphael to food to gesticulation, is an art. Rather than guiding us through the labyrinth of the city’s streets, Samuelson guides us through the labyrinth of life, more daunting than any streetscape.” * Ingrid D. Rowland, author of 'Giordano Bruno' and 'The Collector of Lives' *“In this elegantly written book, Samuelson takes us by the elbow and leads us to his favorite places and works of art in the Eternal City, spinning stories about their history, pointing out their beauties and contradictions, and reflecting on their philosophical meanings. Whether you travel to Rome with this book as your guide, or read it from the comfort of an armchair, Samuelson teaches us ancient lessons that can enrich our modern lives.” * Lori Erickson, author of 'Holy Rover,' 'Near the Exit,' and 'The Soul of the Family Tree' *"A stimulating, thoroughly readable mix. . . For the seasoned Romanist as well as a first-time visitor, this is an excellent vade mecum for our times. All will read it with profit and enlightenment: it will certainly accompany my next trip." -- Sir Michael Fallon * Classics for All *"A breezy and eclectic tour of the Eternal City in which [Samuelson] introduces readers to both physical and philosophical delights.” * WORLD *"The book stands out in its dual appreciation for Rome as a locus for the sweet life and the life of the mind. . . . The author’s wit, enthusiasm, and willingness to turn his head and squint his eyes while looking at what seemingly has been picked over by centuries of cicerones makes reading Rome as a Guide like being on the most engaging of walking tours." * ClassicalEd Review *"As he leads us through the city, Samuelson introduces the largest philosophical questions and shares what the legacy of Roman culture has to teach us by way of answer. The result is an erudite guide to the city’s heritage that offers eloquent instruction on how to conduct ourselves and make meaning in the face of life’s enduring uncertainties.”​ -- James Mustich * In the Company of Books newsletter *Table of ContentsIntroduction: Philosophy as a Guide to la Dolce Vita I Build Not Thereon 1 Die on Your Journey: The Question of Rosa Bathurst’s Tombstone 2 Build on Tragedy: The Humility of Caravaggio’s David with the Head of Goliath 3 Put Down Roots in the Uprooted: The Piety of Bernini’s Aeneas, Anchises, and Ascanius II Remember Death 4 Be Not for Yourself Alone: Cicero in the Ruins of the Forum 5 Take the View from Above: Marcus Aurelius in the Saddle III Reap the Day 6 Conquer Your Fear: Lucretius versus the Roman Triumph 7 Dare to Be Wise: Horace’s View of the City IV Love and Do What You Will 8 Hold Humanity Sacred: Seneca or Augustine versus the Colosseum 9 Crash through the Floor: The Mysteries of the Basilica of San Clemente 10 Make a Golden Ass of Yourself: The Metamorphoses in Agostino Chiti’s Villa V Make a Palace of Your Memory 11 Be the Conversation: The Philosophy of Raphael’s School of Athens 12 Unlock the Soul in Your Soul: Giordano Bruno in the Campo de’ Fiori Conclusion: What Resists Time Is What’s Ever Flowing Acknowledgments Appendix: Rome by Way of the Winged Eye Notes Index

    7 in stock

    £76.00

  • Curious Encounters with the Natural World  From

    MO - University of Illinois Press Curious Encounters with the Natural World From

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Sitting down with this collection of tales is setting off on a series of adventures in which the reader is enticed to share vicariously one exceptional experience after another. The experiences are presented in succinct, entertaining essays and striking images--some poignant, some humorous, some bordering on the incredible, and all informative. Susan Post and Michael Jeffords speak from decades of professional experience and a lifelong passion for natural history that has endowed them with an exceptional receptiveness for nature's curious events, those events rarely witnessed and those that often pass unnoticed and unappreciated."--James B. Nardi, author of Life in the Soil: A Guide for Naturalists and Gardeners"Michael Jeffords's and Susan Post's book is unique in its rich compilation of entertaining narratives and beautiful photographs of natural history phenomena across the world. Their beautiful descriptions of the adaptations and behaviors of creatures large and small incorporate important issues such as invasion of exotic species, extinction, environmental change, and habitat destruction and will inspire others to look more closely at the natural world."--Bonnie Styles, Director Emeritus, Illinois State Museum System

    1 in stock

    £17.99

  • A Jewish Guide in the Holy Land

    Indiana University Press A Jewish Guide in the Holy Land

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewFeldman successfully shows how deeply the political and religious dimensions are intertwined and enacted when guides and pilgrims navigate a sacred landscape marked with politically potent barriers. This kind of material makes A Jewish Guide in the Holy Land a wonderful case study to use in teaching about pilgrimage and tourism in a space marked by multiple narratives of competing nationalisms. * American Ethnologist *The book is recommended for anyone who has ever visited the Holy Land or worked with groups in it. * Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations *A comprehensive tour of the implications, challenges and irritations of Christian tourists guided by US-born or Sabra Jewish Israelis sharing a common, often violent history but from unequal power positions – a journey to the mutual other. In a wonderful playful way - in the most serious sense of the word – he describes his own and other guides' paradigmatic experiences as holders of the keys" to Christian pilgrims' experience of the Holy Land. All take part in a journey exploring theology, religion, politics and human nature in an enormously complex field of encounter. An intense and sometimes breathtaking, sometimes very funny, learning experience for every reader - Jewish and Christian, religious and nonreligious, pilgrim or skeptic. -- Professor Christian Staffa * Evangelische Akademie zu Berlin *Here, the author chronicles his experiences shepherding tourists, mostly Protestants, on pilgrimages to the Holy Land. . . . A unique lens through which to view the conflicted Promised Land. * Kirkus Reviews *One of the personal points that he makes is that guiding Christian pilgrims and tourists contributed towards his development of his Israeli identity. It is interesting that working myself in this specialized industry also made me more aware of my Palestinian identity and in thinking about it, I came to the conclusion that it is the "Land" that we both share. Quite a bit of the Old and New Testament writing; often enough, is expressed metaphorically. In other words, what was written was not always what was meant. The Old Testament writers and Christ himself expressed themselves in parables, allegories, and proverbs, drawing images from the land and its culture. To me it is clear that this shared land that gave rise to two national narratives, can and must incorporate these narratives. It is truly a one Land with two Nations and three Monotheistic Religions. -- Hani Abu Dayyeh * Near East Tours, President *Table of Contents1. How Guiding Christians Made Me Israeli2. Guided Holy Land Pilgrimage—Sharing the Road3. Opening Their Eyes: Performance of a Shared Protestant-Israeli Bible Land4. Christianizing the Conflict: Bethlehem and the Separation Wall5. The Goods of Pilgrimage: Tips, Souvenirs, and the Moralities of Exchange6. The Seductions of Guiding Christians7. Conclusions: Pilgrimage, Performance, and the Suspension of Disbelief

    £56.10

  • A Jewish Guide in the Holy Land

    Indiana University Press A Jewish Guide in the Holy Land

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewFeldman successfully shows how deeply the political and religious dimensions are intertwined and enacted when guides and pilgrims navigate a sacred landscape marked with politically potent barriers. This kind of material makes A Jewish Guide in the Holy Land a wonderful case study to use in teaching about pilgrimage and tourism in a space marked by multiple narratives of competing nationalisms. * American Ethnologist *The book is recommended for anyone who has ever visited the Holy Land or worked with groups in it. * Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations *A comprehensive tour of the implications, challenges and irritations of Christian tourists guided by US-born or Sabra Jewish Israelis sharing a common, often violent history but from unequal power positions – a journey to the mutual other. In a wonderful playful way - in the most serious sense of the word – he describes his own and other guides' paradigmatic experiences as holders of the keys" to Christian pilgrims' experience of the Holy Land. All take part in a journey exploring theology, religion, politics and human nature in an enormously complex field of encounter. An intense and sometimes breathtaking, sometimes very funny, learning experience for every reader - Jewish and Christian, religious and nonreligious, pilgrim or skeptic. -- Professor Christian Staffa * Evangelische Akademie zu Berlin *Here, the author chronicles his experiences shepherding tourists, mostly Protestants, on pilgrimages to the Holy Land. . . . A unique lens through which to view the conflicted Promised Land. * Kirkus Reviews *One of the personal points that he makes is that guiding Christian pilgrims and tourists contributed towards his development of his Israeli identity. It is interesting that working myself in this specialized industry also made me more aware of my Palestinian identity and in thinking about it, I came to the conclusion that it is the "Land" that we both share. Quite a bit of the Old and New Testament writing; often enough, is expressed metaphorically. In other words, what was written was not always what was meant. The Old Testament writers and Christ himself expressed themselves in parables, allegories, and proverbs, drawing images from the land and its culture. To me it is clear that this shared land that gave rise to two national narratives, can and must incorporate these narratives. It is truly a one Land with two Nations and three Monotheistic Religions. -- Hani Abu Dayyeh * Near East Tours, President *Table of Contents1. How Guiding Christians Made Me Israeli2. Guided Holy Land Pilgrimage—Sharing the Road3. Opening Their Eyes: Performance of a Shared Protestant-Israeli Bible Land4. Christianizing the Conflict: Bethlehem and the Separation Wall5. The Goods of Pilgrimage: Tips, Souvenirs, and the Moralities of Exchange6. The Seductions of Guiding Christians7. Conclusions: Pilgrimage, Performance, and the Suspension of Disbelief

    £19.79

  • Other Routes  1500 Years of African and Asian

    Indiana University Press Other Routes 1500 Years of African and Asian

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewThe editors offer 33 carefully excerpted travel accounts that range chronologically from the 5th century CE . . . to the late 19th century . . . . The volume includes a literary foreword by Amitav Ghosh and a lucid and scholarly introduction by Khair. Each of these highly readable travel accounts is preceded by an informative editorial overview that looks at the traveler, the land through which the traveler journeys, and the purpose of travel (commerce, enlightenment, conversion, etc.). . . . Highly recommended. * Choice *Table of ContentsGeneral Introduction by Tabish KhairNote on the Process of Editing1. The 5,000 year old Poetry of Travel: The Epic of Gilgamesh, Kalidasa's Meghadutam and Tang Poetry.2. Three Chinese Scholars go 'West' to India (5th - 7th century)3. The Travels of a Japanese Mond (c. 838)4. A Merchant of Baghdad Reports on a Viking Funeral, A.D. 9225. The Pillow Book of Sei Shonagon (c. 990)6. Alberuni's Defence of Hindu India (1030 AD)7. The Horizons of al-Idrisi in the 11th Century8. The Haj and Other Journeys of Ibn Jubayr (b. 1145)9. Two Chinese Accounts of the Early Mongols (1221 and 1237)10. The Pilgrimages of Lady Nijo (b. 1271)11. The Memoirs of a Syrian Prince-Polymath (b. 1273)12. Al-Abdari, the Disgruntled Traveller (c. 1290)13. Zhou Daguan: Notes on Angkor Wat and Cambodia (1297)14. Ibn Battutah, World Traveller (b. 1304)15. Navigating with ibn Majid (floreat 1460)16. A Korean Official's Account of China (1488)17. The Travel Memoirs of Babur (b. 1482)18. Piri Reis: The Voyages of a 'Corsair' (c. 1526)19. The Ambivalences of Leo Africanus (1526)20. The European Diaries of Uruch Beg (b. 1560)21. The Travel Diaries of Xu Xiake (1623)22. An Arab Cleric in South America (1668-83)23. The Poetry of Basho's Road (1689)24. Mirza I'tesamuddin's Wonders of Vilayet (1765)25. Equiano's Voyage to Slavery and Freedom (1789)26. Dean Mahomed Writes from the Centre (c. 1793)27. African Muslim Slave Narratives of teh 19th Century28. An Indian Aristocrat in Africa and Europe (1803)29. The Diary of Queen Emma of Hawaii (b. 1836)30. Al Amraoui: Moroccan Ambassador to Europe (1860)31. Blyden: A Pan-Africanist's Voyage to Palestine (1873)32. The Shah of Iran in European Corridors (1873)33. An African-Arab Princess in Europe (1881)34. Malabari: A Love-Hate Affair with the British (1890)Bibliography

    1 in stock

    £17.99

  • Travel In The Middle Ages

    University of Notre Dame Press Travel In The Middle Ages

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisTravel in the Middle Ages is filled with the stories and adventures of those who hazarded hostile landscapes, elements, and peopleout of want or necessityto get from place to place. While most journeys involved very short distances (home to market or village to village), longer trips were not uncommon in the Middle Ages. Clergy were frequently called upon to act as ambassadors, messengers, and overseers to the various monasteries and churches within their jurisdiction. Merchants, agents of the king, and pilgrims were also frequently required to travel. While sharing the fascinating stories of these ordinary wayfarers, Verdon also relates colorful tales of the journeys of notable historical figures such as Marco Polo and Christopher Columbus.Part I of Travel in the Middle Ages addresses the means by which people traveled. This section contains vivid descriptions of modes of conveyance, road systems, sea lanes, tolls, taxes, and even pirates. Knowing the risksTrade Review“General readers, eager to be led on an armchair voyage through medieval times and terrain... [will] find it broadening.” —Choice“Verdon has written a fascinating and informative book that is generously interspersed with examples of medieval travel from a constellation of medieval sources....” —History: Reviews of New Books“Jean Verdon does a comprehensive job of accounting for most motives, methods, costs, durations, dangers, fears, landscapes, seascapes, fantasies, criticisms, and occasions of medieval travel from the fourth-century Bordeaux Pilgrim to Christopher Columbus. He admirably includes Arabic travelers and their wide Asian and African range, notably Ibn Battuta, as well as the great Jewish traveler, Ibrahim ibn Yakub.” —The Historian“Many times the title of a book promises more than its content delivers. Travel in the Middle Ages does just the opposite. Jean Verdon... offers the reader an original and scholarly work that has all the authority of learned and detailed research but that manages to read like an intriguing creative mystery novel. This book offers a rare and informative insight into the life and times of the European Middle Ages. It is recommended for specialist and non-specialist alike.”—Cistercian Studies Quarterly“...[E]ngrossing.... Through Verdon’s extensive and skillful use of historic accounts ... the reader learns how travelers coped." —ForeWord’s Top Ten“An original and scholarly work by Jean Verdon... and ably translated into English by George Holoch. An expertly researched history and thoroughly reader friendly descriptive text offers the students and non-specialist general reader alike, a rare and informative insight into life and times of Europeans several centuries past. Travel in the Middle Ages is seminal and enormously important contribution to Medieval Studies reference collections and reading lists." —Midwest Book Review"Many thanks to George Holoch, whose English translation makes it possible for us to read French medievalist Jean Verdon's book Travel in the Middle Ages. It is a well organized and well composed book. ...every story is told with wit and humor.... This book, like Verdon's other books on premodern pleasure, leisure, night, and drink, reflects the delightful nature of human history." —The Sixteenth Century Journal“…genial, lively, wide ranging… suitable for general readers and undergraduates…” —Historian

    1 in stock

    £25.19

  • Journey to the Maghreb and Andalusia 1832

    Pennsylvania State University Press Journey to the Maghreb and Andalusia 1832

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA comprehensive, annotated English translation of Eugène Delacroix’s most significant writings during his travels in Morocco, Algeria, and southern Spain, recording his observations of places, people, costume, landscapes, and architecture.Trade Review“The notebooks make for a fascinating read and will be of interest not only to specialists of Delacroix and Orientalism, but also to scholars of French colonialism in North Africa and travel writing more in general. Delacroix brought a keen eye and wrote avidly about what he saw in Tangiers and elsewhere in Morocco.”—Thomas Dodman H-France“Eugène Delacroix’s journey to Morocco in 1832 was one of the defining artistic moments of the nineteenth century, and it is brought to glorious life by Michèle Hannoosh’s compilation and translation. This work chronicles the artist’s journey and provides exceptional insights into his fascination with the ‘Orient’ and his motivations as a painter.”—John Zarobell,author of Empire of Landscape: Space and Ideology in French Colonial Algeria“Michèle Hannoosh’s 2009 edition of Delacroix’s journal contained a wealth of new information about an artist known for his brilliant insights as well as his magnificent works. Here she reveals to us Delacroix’s direct experience, lasting memories, and recognition of his new way of seeing. Hannoosh’s work is an inestimable contribution to our understanding of this great artist and of the nineteenth century.”—Beth S. Wright,author of Painting and History During the French Restoration“Delacroix scholars know Michèle Hannoosh through her stunning discoveries of unpublished Delacroix texts, her impeccable editions of his writings, and her compelling interpretations of his work. This volume reveals her to be a superb translator as well. It will be an invaluable resource for students, teachers, or simply admirers of Delacroix's work. The introduction and commentary provide crucial new insights for experts, and Hannoosh's translations are eminently readable, marvelously capturing the varying tone of Delacroix's prose, which ranged from direct observations to stylish commentary and from bitter sarcasm to genuine enthusiasm.”—David O'Brien,author of Exiled in Modernity: Delacroix, Civilization, and Barbarism“In this welcome and timely book, Hannoosh presents the first comprehensive, annotated English translation of Delacroix’s important and often cited multifarious observations of his voyages to the Maghreb and Andalusia. The translation is clear, crisp, and elegant as well as faithful to the artist’s original. The voice and thought of Delacroix are made vividly manifest in this splendid translation.”—Dorothy Johnson,author of David to Delacroix: The Rise of Romantic Mythology“Hannoosh’s unfailingly elegant translation and annotation are greatly enriched by her deep research into the wider social and aesthetic universe through which Delacroix moved, traveled, experienced the world, and thus refined his artistic sensibilities. This book is a visual and textual delight, and it contributes immeasurably to long-standing debates in art history and the historical sciences about ‘Orientalist’ representations of peoples and cultures on the Mediterranean’s southern shores.”—Julia Clancy-Smith,author of Mediterraneans: North Africa and Europe in an Age of Migration, c. 1800–1900 Table of ContentsContentsIntroductionMemories of a Visit to MoroccoA Jewish Wedding in MoroccoNotebooksMarginalia to “Memories of a Visit to Morocco”Notes and Drafts for “Memories of a Visit to Morocco”Appendix A: SupplementaryMaterial from the NotebooksAppendix B: History of the ManuscriptsBiographiesGlossary of Moroccan TermsBibliographyIndex

    1 in stock

    £28.76

  • Journeys Beyond the Pale  Yiddish Travel Writing in the Modern World

    MP-WIS Uni of Wisconsin Journeys Beyond the Pale Yiddish Travel Writing in the Modern World

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn examination of how Yiddish writers, from Mendele Moycher Sforim to Der Nister to the famed Sholem Aleichem, used motifs of travel to express their complicated relationship with modernization.Trade ReviewThis book is deliciously subversive. Garrett demonstrates that the major writers in Yiddish, a language without its own territory, wrote as if their Jewish subjects lived and traveled freely at the center of the world; not on its margins, not in a ghetto, not in a valorized state of exile. - David G. Roskies, Jewish Theological Seminary; ""Garrett's work goes a long way towards conceptualizing and analyzing a phenomenon omnipresent in Yiddish short stories, novels, poetry, and drama, combining theoretical considerations of the journey in general and specific, nuaneed readings of Jewish journeys in particular."" - Jeremy Dauber, Columbia University; ""This kind of scholarship is vital for the further progress in Yiddish studies and its integration into the mainstream humanities."" - Misha Krutikov, Oxford Institute for Yiddish Studies

    1 in stock

    £16.96

  • Tourism Landscape and the Irish Character

    MP-WIS Uni of Wisconsin Tourism Landscape and the Irish Character

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £23.96

  • Survivors in Mexico

    Yale University Press Survivors in Mexico

    Book SynopsisRebecca West's never-before-published 'Survivors in Mexico' brings to readers a work by a major 20thh-century author. An exhilarating exploration of Mexican history, religion, art and culture, it explores the inner lives of figures ranging from Corres and Montezuma to Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo and Leon Trotsky.Trade Review"A volume that makes for luscious reading. A good portion of the book is West's survey and commentary on the collision of Spain and the Aztecs—among the most wondrous tales human history has to tell. . . . The book succeeds beautifully as a travelogue thanks to West's intellect and experience, with Mexico serving as the vehicle for it all. . . . Readers should come to Survivors in Mexico expecting less of Mexico and more of the vital mind of Rebecca West, but that's not a bad thing."—Sam Quinones, Washington Post Book World"An enthrallingly readable book. . . . Very few writers have managed to be more knowledgeable and profound in their thinking. . . . Survivors in Mexico is an astonishingly fertile book, full of sharp impressions and stimulating insights, whether West is pondering the question of why miners have been among the most mistreated of all laborers or speculating about the social and political effects of the Aztecs' lack of domesticated animals. . . . West's deeply personal take on Mexico is ultimately a meditation on the meaning of life itself."—Merle Rubin, Los Angeles Times Book Review

    £18.57

  • All the Wrong Places

    WW Norton & Co All the Wrong Places

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe prize-winning author of Fire Season returns with the heartrending story of his troubled years before finding solace in the wilderness.Trade Review"Combin[ing] lyricism with dark humor to draw lines between grief and the uncanny... Connors' story [is] told with harrowing and fierce prose." "Affecting... Sharply funny... [Told with] subtle, evocative prose and depth of feeling." "Find room on your bookshelf next to Wallace Stegner and Norman Maclean; Philip Connors is here to stay." -- Alexandra Fuller "Philip Connors probably had to write All the Wrong Places for his own peace of mind; but in the process, he has given all readers a gift. As this sparklingly well-written memoir bores deeper toward the heart of something that cannot be understood, it keeps getting impossibly better, becoming that much more absorbing, that much more tender, more thoughtful, wry, and heartfelt. This is a marvelous book." -- Charles Bock "In this story of a dark, and at times darkly funny, decade of the soul, Philip Connors doesn't so much set out to solve the mystery of his brother's suicide as struggle to escape its gravitational field-struggle and fail, wretchedly at times, in life if not on the page. On the page, he has salvaged a memoir of great honesty and artistry from the aftermath of grief." -- Donovan Hohn "Philip Connors possesses a quietly fierce and mesmerizing prose style, a skeptical and witty mind, a huge heart, and a haunted soul. Add it all up and you have one of the best younger writers in America. The story of All the Wrong Places is a moving one, but it's Connors's artistry that makes it transcendent." -- Sam Lipsyte "Philip Connors is one hell of a storyteller." -- Sean Wilsey

    4 in stock

    £20.89

  • A Colored Man Round the World

    LUP - University of Michigan Press A Colored Man Round the World

    Book Synopsis

    £17.95

  • Ring of Seasons

    The University of Michigan Press Ring of Seasons

    Book Synopsis

    £22.75

  • Visionary Journeys

    Harvard University, Asia Center Visionary Journeys

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book explores two important moments of dislocation in Chinese history, the early medieval period (317–589 CE) and the nineteenth century. Tian juxtaposes a rich array of materials from these two periods in comparative study, linking these historical moments in their unprecedented interactions, and intense fascination, with foreign cultures.Trade ReviewThe heaven–hell framework for understanding the world away from home—either as a perfect realm or its opposite—had a stunning hold on Chinese travel writing from early on, and Tian demonstrates how it continued to do so well into the nineteenth century…Her book is splendid. -- Joshua Fogel * American Historical Review *A supreme achievement in literary studies. -- Marion Eggert * Journal of Asian Studies *

    2 in stock

    £30.56

  • Moscow Diary

    Harvard University Press Moscow Diary

    Book SynopsisThe life of literary critic and philosopher Benjamin (1892–1940) is a veritable allegory of the life of letters in the 20th century. Benjamin’s intellectual odyssey included an eventful trip to the USSR. His stunning account of that journey is unique among his writings for the frank, merciless way he struggles with his motives and his conscience.Trade ReviewIn the ’20s and ’30s, [Benjamin] was a Jew in Berlin, a visitor to the Russian Revolution, a refugee in France, a citizen of the world in flames. More a man of letters than scholar, and more poet than either one, he wandered through Western culture as if it had been destroyed centuries earlier, and he were a revenant poking through its remains. He amassed quotations and collected books and toys, with no illusion of finding a living civilization, but seeking the artifacts of a shattered one… Love, mixed with obsession, is at the heart of Moscow Diary, the private record of Benjamin’s two-month visit to the Soviet Union in the winter of 1926. Edited and with an afterword by Gary Smith and lucidly translated by Richard Sieburth, it is a many-faceted jewel: a portrait of the Russian revolution in its still unsettled transition to Stalinism, a vivid picture of Moscow life, Benjamin’s intellectual journal, and above all, the tragicomic story of his pursuit of the Estonian actress, Asja Lacis. -- Richard Eder * Los Angeles Times Book Review *The German literary critic and philosopher Walter Benjamin, who died in 1940, was one of Europe’s grandest thinkers. This diary covers only two months in the winter of 1926–1927, but it feels like a lifetime. His meticulous, almost macabre attention to detail gives his perceptions a kind of scientific brilliance, whether he is describing the streets of the city, a curious shop sign, the sanatorium where his friend Asja Lacis is a patient, the wash table in his hotel room, or the ragged beds that stand at every street corner in ‘the open air sick bay called Moscow.’ The book is a supreme example of the kind of mental equipment any traveller would like to take with him, to any place. * The Independent *[An] unsurpassably quirky memoir of Bolshevik literati as Stalin consolidated power. * New Society *Moscow Diary is chiefly interesting not for what it tells us about Moscow during December 1926 but for what it tells us about Walter Benjamin, who has by now emerged as both a major figure in modern German literature and criticism and as the preeminent poet-historian of the modern European city. Moscow Diary is the longest of Benjamin’s autobiographical writings… [Benjamin’s] insights into Russia’s struggle to define its cultural identity are often compelling. Above all, the Diary is the story of the triangle among Benjamin, Asja [Lācis], and the expatriate German playwright Bernhard Reich. Their story of emotional instabilities and obstacles provides a fascinating counterpart to the story of Russia’s cultural dilemma. The edition is superbly translated, annotated, and illustrated, and contains a fine preface and afterword. * Choice *Table of ContentsPreface by Gershom Scholem Moscow Diary Appendices 'Russian Toys" by Walter Benjamin Letters from Walter Benjamin Afterword by Gary Smith Index

    £27.86

  • Betye Saar Heart of a Wanderer

    Princeton University Press Betye Saar Heart of a Wanderer

    Book SynopsisTrade Review"Shortlisted for the Alfred H. Barr Jr. Award, College Art Association""An Art Newspaper Top Art Book of the Year""This beautiful book . . . details the artist’s journeys over 50 years, from trips to Morocco in 1968 and Guatemala in 2018. . . . It is as close as a mass-produced art tome gets to an artist’s book—a covetable object in its own right."---Ben Luke, The Art Newspaper"Determined to expand awareness about this much overlooked Black artist, Betye Saar . . . extends the previous scope of insight into her practice beyond her assemblages; the book includes color reproductions of half a dozen notebooks from her decades of world travel."---Patrick James Dunagan, Rain Taxi Review of Books"Full-colour throughout, this fabulous volume—as close as commercial publishing gets to an artist’s book—explores the importance of travel for the African American sculptor Betye Saar. Interweaving the explanatory text and images of Saar’s assemblages (found material combined with the artist’s own drawings and paintings) are full-page facsimiles of her fascinating travel journals."---Jacqueline Riding, The Art Newspaper

    £34.20

  • History of ideas Travel writing History of the

    LUP - Voltaire Foundation History of ideas Travel writing History of the

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisTable of ContentsHistory of ideasJEAN BLOCH et al., Enlightenment uncertainties: moral, pedagogical and scientific debates of eighteenth-century FranceANGELICA GOODDEN, Scrutinising the body: anatomy and propriety in eighteenth-century FranceJULIE PEAKMAN, Bodily anxieties in Enlightenment sex literatureJEAN BLOCH, Mid-century ambivalence: Mme Le Prince de Beaumont and Madeleine de Puisieux on the education of girlsKATHERINE ASTBURY, Marmontel and Baculard d'Arnaud's (im)moral talesJOHN DUNKLEY, Berquin's L'Ami des enfants and L'Ami des adolescents: innocence into experienceTravel writingKEES VAN STRIEN (ed.), JOSEPH BANKS, 'Journal of a tour in Holland', 1773History of the bookRAYMOND BIRN, Book censorship in eighteenth-century France and Rousseau's responseEnlightenment and antiquityELENI FILIPPAKI, La Mettrie on Descartes, Seneca and the Happy lifeREED BENHAMOU, Casting the antique: behind the scenes at the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture

    7 in stock

    £98.30

  • Paris 1937  Worlds on Exhibition

    MB - Cornell University Press Paris 1937 Worlds on Exhibition

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis elegant and theoretically informed book, illustrated with forty-five photographs, explores the cultural significance of six exhibitions or new museum installations, all opening in Paris between mid-1937 and early 1938: the commercially oriented...Trade ReviewA critical perspective which is both specifically original and consistent with recent studies of Universal Exhibitions and of the strategic design of the modern Museum.... Even those not entirely comfortable with the ramifications of the 'unseen gods' figured in the displays of the 1930s will learn much from the detailed analysis of those representations and their intersecting semiotics and ideologies.... It is not merely its 45 fascinating archival photographs which leave one with the sense of the 'visual command'... which the author himself brings to his subject. To look at 1937 through his eyes, and then across to Eiffel's negating panoptic tower, is to ensure that the view from the Trocadero will never be quite the same again. * Journal of European Studies *In his thought-provoking and ambitious new book, James D. Herbert offers a penetrating analysis of... the 1937 Exposition internationale des arts et techniques and five contemporaneous museum installations and exhibitions that either complemented it or parodied it.... The strength of Herbert's study is... to demonstrate how, taken together, the exhibitions in fact presented a surprisingly cohesive and complementary series of images.... In its diligent research and thoughtful exposition across disparate fields, Paris 1937 is a substantial contribution to the burgeoning field of modern exhibition history. Herbert's book should have an impact not just on the critical examination of installations but more broadly on how we discuss the complex relationship between images in the public sphere and the formation of identity. -- Adam Jolles * Modernism/modernity *Herbert has... placed his historical narrative within a poststructuralist synthesis of his own devising that is... brilliant.... Read as a historical narrative that presents valuable insights in somewhat unexpected ways, it is enormously satisfying and deserves attention. -- Jerry Cullum * Art in America *

    1 in stock

    £66.60

  • The Edge of Extinction

    Cornell University Press The Edge of Extinction

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisJules Pretty explores life and change in a dozen environments and cultures across the world, taking us on a series of remarkable journeys to show that there are many different ways to live in cooperation with nature.Trade Review[Pretty] describes an astonishing diversity of human experience in which our species has learned to live well with, rather than against, nature and often each other. -- Andrew Simms * The Guardian *Jules Pretty traveled the world to find places where people live and work in concert with the land. In this book, he shares his story of these travels and the people he met along the way to emphasize the utter importance of caring for what we have before we have it no more.... He shares these stories to honor them and to educate us. -- REH * Wildlife Activist *The key to a long term sustainable future is an appeal to a loving care of beauty and the vibrant communities it gives rise to, rather than either the instilling of fear of catastrophe or utilitarian calculation. It is, finally, this recurring testimony that makes the book not only a thoughtful exploration of the lives of others, genuinely other, tracking different paths to the mainstream, but a tracing of the patterns of what it might mean to love a place and be at home in it. The homes themselves are all strikingly different but bound by being places that first and foremost are genuinely listened to—its possibilities and the stories it can give rise to. -- Nicholas Colloff * Network Review *Pretty (environment and society, Univ. of Essex; The Earth Only Endures) provides the reader with a verbal feast for the senses while detailing his experiences in a variety of landscapes, from the steppes of Russia to the farmland of Ohio's Amish country. The author reveals the ways in which many people around the globe continue to live in harmony with the land despite the unavoidable encroachment of modern technology and values. In what could be considered either a strength of the book or a weakness, Pretty stays away from divisive political statements regarding environmentalism, though he does advocate for governments to allow the indigenous peoples of their land to live with minimal intervention. This work is no political rallying cry; rather it is a celebration of the beauty and culture of "extreme" landscapes and slower lifestyles the world over. VERDICT Readers who delight in detailed travel writing will relish Pretty's masterly descriptions of deserts, swamps, and mountains, as well as the daily activities of those who live in these environments. * Library Journal *Table of Contents1. Seacoast: Ngai Tahu, Aotearoa (New Zealand) 2. Mountain: Huangshan, China 3. Desert Coast: Murujuga (Burrup), Australia 4. Steppe: Tuva, Russia 5. Snow: Karelia, Finland 6. Swamp: Okavango, Botswana 7. Marsh-Farm: East Anglia, England 8. Coast: Antrim Glens, Northern Ireland 9. Snow: Nitassinan, Labrador, Canada 10. Farm-City: Amish Country, Ohio, United States 11. Swamp: Atchafalaya Basin, Louisiana, United States 12. Desert: Timbisha (Death Valley), California, United States Coda: Dreaming of the Day AfterNotes Bibliography Acknowledgments

    1 in stock

    £20.89

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