Jill Hutchinson's Reviews > Neither Here nor There: Travels in Europe

Neither Here nor There by Bill Bryson
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it was ok
bookshelves: non-fiction, humor

I have to admit that Bryson is a funny man and I chuckled several times while reading this book BUT he is also very snarky and not politically correct. This book covers his travels in Europe from Norway to Istanbul and his complaints about everything, including the tourists....hey, isn't he a tourist?

Sweden....... beautiful people and the women try to catch what sun there is while sunbathing topless.
Paris...loves the city, hates the people who "needed the Americans to help them win the war".
Germany.....he made so many Nazi related comments(!) that I don't have the space to include them. But they have good beer
Austria.........the women are ugly
Capri.....loved it but the people were strange.
And ad nauseam.

I am probably in the minority since his books are extremely popular but I felt that many of his comments were unnecessary and biased, He can be a very entertaining writer but this book was not worthy of his talents.
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Reading Progress

June 13, 2019 – Shelved (Other Paperback Edition)
June 13, 2019 – Shelved as: to-read (Other Paperback Edition)
July 13, 2019 – Started Reading
July 13, 2019 – Shelved
July 13, 2019 –
page 53
20.87% "I had forgotten how funny some of Bill Bryson's books can be.......and I am only 53 pages into this one."
July 14, 2019 –
page 81
31.89%
July 16, 2019 – Finished Reading
July 17, 2019 – Shelved as: non-fiction
July 17, 2019 – Shelved as: humor

Comments Showing 1-10 of 10 (10 new)

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message 1: by Jamie (new)

Jamie Maybe it's an age thing. When I was younger I thought Bryson was hilarious, but the older I got the more strained his humor seemed to be. When I read Walk in the Woods and Lost Continent I smiled a few times but found myself checking how many more paged I needed to read before I could move on to better books.


message 2: by Jill (new) - added it

Jill Hutchinson You may be right, Jamie. Some of it bordered on offensive.


message 3: by Ian (new) - rated it 2 stars

Ian I never did like this one much, but I also agree with Jamie's comment. I thought The Lost Continent was hilarious when I read it 30 years ago but would probably find it too snarky now.


message 4: by Jamie (new)

Jamie "Snarky" is an excellent word for it. There were some cringe-inducing passages. Many of these people are economically disadvantaged and just trying to make an honest living however they can; there is no need to point and gawk,


message 5: by Bob (new)

Bob Newman What is it with travel writers? I haven't read vast numbers, but many do go down that road......of negative comments passing as humor or "interesting views". Like "I ate this horrible stuff" or "the natives were so pesky" or "there was trash everywhere as I picked my way down the once beautiful beach", ad nauseam. OK, once in a while, but if that's your main tone??? Does interesting writing have to point out the faults in everything or make fun of the subjects?


message 6: by Jamie (new)

Jamie I think the difference is that there is lowbrow travel writing, which tries too hard to be funny by pointing out how different other people are from us, and thoughtful travel writing, which gives insights into cultures and places. In the latter category I would recommend Paul Theroux and Robert Kaplan.


message 7: by Bob (last edited Jul 21, 2019 04:16AM) (new)

Bob Newman Well, I certainly agree on Robert Kaplan, and I could add Colin Thebron among some others too. However, Paul Theroux's work, for me, falls into the "Everything Was Disappointing and the People Were Such Idiots" type of writer. I think he has gotten more cynical and critical as he has gotten older. Sure, this is a general human tendency, but it doesn't do a lot for travel writing. Thanks for the comment anyhow. Bob


message 8: by Jill (new) - added it

Jill Hutchinson Thanks to y'all for the interesting comments with which I totally agree. I almost didn't finish the book because of the negativity. Some of the comments such as, "I can't believe nobody spoke English" while he visited Istanbul made me cringe. I bet Bryson doesn't speak Turkish, Kurmanji, or Arabic!


message 9: by Porter (new)

Porter Broyles Having lived in Europe, more people speak English than about to it. There were times were is be struggling to speak German with a person who said they didn't speak English, when they'd break out in perfect English.

They just get tired of people (mostly Americans) not event trying to speak their language


message 10: by Porter (new)

Porter Broyles About = admit


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