The Road to Oxiana
by Robert Byron
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 42)
Read in August, 2006
The 1930s, from this distance at least, feels like the last time you could go somewhere in the world and it would be really different, plus there was still an aristocratic class with the money and free time to meander around the world with all the positive and negative results of amateur exploration. The actual writing of the book is odd and varied and quite modernist - Paul Fussell (who I will be adding to my booklist before long) says The Road to Oxiana is to travel writing what Ulysses is to ...more
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Read in November, 2006
The Road to Oxiana follows the wanderings of Robert Byron, a British intellectual traveling through Cyprus, Palestine, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, and India in the early 1930's. He is tired of Europe's preoccupation with classical aesthetics, and is wandering through the barren near-east in search of architectural wonders that emerge from a different set of values. He records his findings, and in this record we find an account of one man's often bizarre travels, his finely wrought descriptio...more
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Probably the most seductive opening paragraphs i've ever read.
"Venice, August 20th, 1933.-- Here as a joy-hog: a pleasant change after that pension on the Giudecca two years ago. We went to the Lido this morning, and the Doge's Palace looked more beautiful from a speed-boat than it ever did from a gondola. The bathing, on a calm day, must be the worst in Europe: water like hot saliva, cigar-ends floating into one's mouth, and shoals of jellyfish.
Lifar came to dinner. Berti...more
"Venice, August 20th, 1933.-- Here as a joy-hog: a pleasant change after that pension on the Giudecca two years ago. We went to the Lido this morning, and the Doge's Palace looked more beautiful from a speed-boat than it ever did from a gondola. The bathing, on a calm day, must be the worst in Europe: water like hot saliva, cigar-ends floating into one's mouth, and shoals of jellyfish.
Lifar came to dinner. Berti...more
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Read in March, 2008
I truly did not want this book to end.
"While the cadent sun throws lurid copper streaks across the sand-blown sky, all the birds in Persia have gathered for a last chorus. Slowly, the darkness brings silence, and they settle themselves to sleep with diminishing flutterings, as of a child arranging its bedclothes. And then another note begins, a hot metallic blue note, timidly at first, gaining courage, throbbing without cease, until, as if the second violins had crept into action, it b...more
"While the cadent sun throws lurid copper streaks across the sand-blown sky, all the birds in Persia have gathered for a last chorus. Slowly, the darkness brings silence, and they settle themselves to sleep with diminishing flutterings, as of a child arranging its bedclothes. And then another note begins, a hot metallic blue note, timidly at first, gaining courage, throbbing without cease, until, as if the second violins had crept into action, it b...more
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Love, love, love travel writing about exotic places I'll never be. Byron's Persia/Afghanistan book falls perfectly into this category and has wonderful descriptions of the countryside and his experiences. I think it falters a bit in his descriptions of the architecture, mostly because he's extremely academic about it without really telling you anything - he does better at it when he's so overwhelmed that he can't help but give in to his poetic instincts.
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Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
fans of historical travel writing and well, anyone else
A classic of travel literature. What I cannot emphasize enough is the level of absurdism that any contemporary modern day traveller will read into Byron's actions while exploring the middle east. The hilarity of his interactions with his own British compatriots and those native to the countries in which he imposed himself is what drew me in to this narrative. I tended to skim the architectural bits.
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The roads from Herat to Badghis, ,then Maimana, up to kabul and then India, twere not better in Byron's time in the 1920's than they are now. The book is a great travel book, beautifully written and the subject fascinating.
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Read in November, 2000
My favorite passage was the one on bargaining, British imperialist style. But it was tough to follow in parts, and probably not that interesting unless you've been to the region or have an appreciation for it historically.
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Read in November, 2007
Nonfiction.
Travel through Syria, Jerusalem, Iraq, Persia, Afghanistan.
Journey from August 1933 and the following June, without the aid of credit cards and cell phones or any instant communication.
Travel through Syria, Jerusalem, Iraq, Persia, Afghanistan.
Journey from August 1933 and the following June, without the aid of credit cards and cell phones or any instant communication.
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Read in July, 2007
recommends it for:
travel enthusiasts
robert (not lord) byron travels overland from beirut to peshawar in the early 30s. very readable! loved it.
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ah yes. the journey of Robert Byron through early 20th century middle east and central asia.
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