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  <title><![CDATA[Continental Drifter]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;grand tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son called Thomas Coryate.<p>There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. Frequently, his jokes are brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. But unlike Bryson, Moore can make gaffes of taste, and some readers may find the gags about car crash victims and murdered Kosovan families beyond the pale.<p>This is a very funny book in places, and Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story. Yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book is a good 60 pages too long and begins to drag in the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em></p></p>]]></description>
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    <![CDATA[Continental Drifter]]>
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    <![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;grand tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son called Thomas Coryate.<p>There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. Frequently, his jokes are brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. But unlike Bryson, Moore can make gaffes of taste, and some readers may find the gags about car crash victims and murdered Kosovan families beyond the pale.<p>This is a very funny book in places, and Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story. Yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book is a good 60 pages too long and begins to drag in the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em></p></p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[Tim Moore doesn't do ordinary. Certainly not as far as travel is concerned. He's walked the breadth of northern Spain with a donkey, cycled the Tour de France route and capered across the sites on the London Monopoly board. In The Grand Tour he goes back in time to follow the footsteps of Thomas Cor...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/19182125">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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      <review>
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    <![CDATA[Continental Drifter]]>
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    <![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;grand tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son called Thomas Coryate.<p>There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. Frequently, his jokes are brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. But unlike Bryson, Moore can make gaffes of taste, and some readers may find the gags about car crash victims and murdered Kosovan families beyond the pale.<p>This is a very funny book in places, and Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story. Yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book is a good 60 pages too long and begins to drag in the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em></p></p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[One of the most amusing travel books I've ever read. A tour of Europe by auto, it proffers a very male sense of sardonic humor that is often outrageous.]]></body>
    
  <url><![CDATA[http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/39438406]]></url>
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      <review>
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  <title>
    <![CDATA[Continental Drifter]]>
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    <![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;grand tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son called Thomas Coryate.<p>There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. Frequently, his jokes are brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. But unlike Bryson, Moore can make gaffes of taste, and some readers may find the gags about car crash victims and murdered Kosovan families beyond the pale.<p>This is a very funny book in places, and Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story. Yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book is a good 60 pages too long and begins to drag in the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em></p></p>]]>
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    <body><![CDATA[he is a funny guy.<br/>The writing is a bit flowery at times, i winder if he is trying too hard.<br/><br/>]]></body>
    
  <url><![CDATA[http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/80902223]]></url>
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      <review>
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    <![CDATA[Continental Drifter]]>
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  <average_rating>5.00</average_rating>
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    <![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;Grand Tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son named Thomas Coryate. <p> There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. His jokes are frequently brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. <p> Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story, yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book drags through the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em> </p></p>]]>
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  <read_at>Thu Mar 01 00:00:00 -0800 2001</read_at>
  <date_added>Tue Mar 11 07:34:56 -0700 2008</date_added>
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    <body><![CDATA[Two of my favorite things in life are traveling and reading and this is without a doubt my favorite travel book.  I suppose the fact that I made it something of a mission to do my own cut-rate version of the Grand Tour gives this added resonance, although I hasten to add this was inspired by my hist...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/17504849">more...</a>]]></body>
    
  <url><![CDATA[http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/17504849]]></url>
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      <review>
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    <![CDATA[Continental Drifter]]>
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    <![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;grand tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son called Thomas Coryate.<p>There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. Frequently, his jokes are brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. But unlike Bryson, Moore can make gaffes of taste, and some readers may find the gags about car crash victims and murdered Kosovan families beyond the pale.<p>This is a very funny book in places, and Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story. Yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book is a good 60 pages too long and begins to drag in the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em></p></p>]]>
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  <date_updated>Wed Dec 16 18:39:56 -0800 2009</date_updated>
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    <body><![CDATA[No matter how you try and rationalise it, <a href="http://www.goodreads.com/search/search?q= Tim Moore" title=" Tim Moore"> Tim Moore</a> is a genius. Whether he's attempting to ride the Tour De France, walk the Camino with a donkey or, as in this case, follow in the footsteps of the original Grand Tourist, he does it with a tight-fisted, bumbling elan that's as addictive as a crack...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/950847">more...</a>]]></body>
    
  <url><![CDATA[http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/950847]]></url>
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</review>
      <review>
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    <![CDATA[Continental Drifter]]>
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    <![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;grand tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son called Thomas Coryate.<p>There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. Frequently, his jokes are brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. But unlike Bryson, Moore can make gaffes of taste, and some readers may find the gags about car crash victims and murdered Kosovan families beyond the pale.<p>This is a very funny book in places, and Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story. Yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book is a good 60 pages too long and begins to drag in the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em></p></p>]]>
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  <date_added>Fri Nov 20 14:22:57 -0800 2009</date_added>
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    <![CDATA[Tim Moore's first book, <em>Frost on My Moustache</em> had one reviewer setting him up as a &quot;contender for Bill Bryson's crown as king of comic travels&quot;. That successful debut is now followed with this offering--a journey in the style of Byronesque &quot;grand tours&quot; of Europe. Travelling in a clapped-out Rolls Royce, Moore follows the trail of the first recognised British tourist of Europe, a 17th-century pastor's son called Thomas Coryate.<p>There is certainly something of Bill Bryson in Moore's style, and this book is reminiscent of <em>Neither Here Nor There</em>. He cracks similar slapstick quips and travels with a liberal dose of self-irony. Frequently, his jokes are brilliantly judged and have you laughing out loud. But unlike Bryson, Moore can make gaffes of taste, and some readers may find the gags about car crash victims and murdered Kosovan families beyond the pale.<p>This is a very funny book in places, and Moore writes moving passages about Coryate and his ultimately tragic story. Yet, in spite of its undoubted merits, <em>Continental Drifter</em> turns into something of a disappointment. By the end--perhaps because the first 100 pages are so good--it feels as though Moore could have done with a more severe editor. The book is a good 60 pages too long and begins to drag in the second half, when Moore's comic timing diminishes along with his enthusiasm for the journey--and I'm not just saying that because he coins &quot;toby&quot; as a new word for sewage. --<em>Toby Green</em></p></p>]]>
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