On the rooftop of the world, shoe-horned into the Grand Himalayas, Bhutanor Thunder Dragonis a fiercely independent kingdom. Isolated, charming, peaceful and religious, the Bhutanese are a pragmatic, sensitive people who take from the West what will benef
Take Lafcadio Hearn’s multi travelogues in Japan, remove all of his superfluous adjectives and descriptive meanderings, and change the locale to Bhutan and you have a good idea of this book’s style. But add history and cultural details to round out the introduction the the culture and people and you have a much more complete insight to the country. Given the author’s special relationship with the Bhutanese government and people, I venture that this is the book to read on the topic, and to leverage the exhaustive bibliography for further study.
This is a guidebook, yes, but it's primarily an explication of culture and history. It does not follow a traveler's guide format in that it says where to eat, and find footpaths, but instead emphasizes the Bhutan-ness of Bhutan. A must read before departure for your own trip to this country, and the bibliography in the back is incredibly up to date.
This book is as whimsical and engaging as Françoise is herself. Utterly authoritative guide to Bhutan, not particularly a guidebook per se as much as an introduction to a country by someone who lives and cares passionately about this particular spot on the map.
Lots of good information about Bhutan. Good info on history and the culture. Perhaps too many names of historic figures, at least too many for the casual reader to keep track of.