What do you think?
Rate this book


250 pages, Paperback
Published September 28, 2019
There is a time in life when the question “how did I get here?” assumes an irresistible fascination. Our sense of identity lies rooted in the narrative of our lives, in choices taken, for good or ill, opportunities embraced or declined. How often we wonder at the formative adventures of our youth!
“The Heron in Isfahan” is just such a dialogue between Spring and Autumn. The author’s point of departure is the tiny red diary she took with her as she and her friend, fresh from school, struck boldly out on the Hippie Trail, their only guidebook the cosmic nostrums of Richard Alpert’s Be Here Now. Alongside the “haunting and surreal” songs of the Incredible String Band, this would be enough to establish an instant bond with fellow seekers and travellers, all exploring the possibilities of a freedom that meant “nothing left to lose”. Those were evidently very different times.
There are adventures galore to relate, as she progresses East – not least, the outbreak of war shortly before her ferry is due to arrive in Israel. Caroline marvels at her teenage self as she encounters unexpected adversity, trusting that somehow all will be well, and grapples with the challenges of young adulthood. There is so much to be learned, not just from her instant friends on the road, but from the kindness – and otherwise – of complete strangers. All is keenly observed, material for her questing, and questioning soul.
I love this book. There is so much of interest in its incidental detail, its evocation of a vanished age, and its depiction of a way of life in which the miraculous is surely to be expected, at least somewhere around the next bend. The text is engaging and well presented, with the contrasting voices of youth and experience easily identified by different fonts, and adorned throughout with young Carrie’s delightful drawings and designs. Above all, though, this deeply touching memoir impresses the reader with its pervasive honesty and humanity, inviting us all on a journey into the mystery of being.