He thinks aloud about its history, art and culture. He presents a world not visible. A gentle read tha In the spring of 1999, Kathryn Harrison set out to walk the part of the pilgrim route to Santiago … Nooteboom was a highly literate author, and his writing flows with allusions to many historical, cultural, religious and other events, most of them interesting in their own right. I think that the translator from Dutch has done a wonderful job and the book reads most freely. His prose is as sturdy as a good Rioja, and equally delicious. It was his own personal account that sprang to life. In front of the cathedral are offices where the pilgrims who have walked the Road to Santiago get stamps showing where they have stopped along the way. I enjoyed the book but if you are looking for something very specific or details about a big Spanish city or The Camino, this is not your book. Steve's team has to find more evidence before the perpetrator is released from prison. He writes passionately about his travels across the land, traversing history, culture, and the role of Spain in the modern world. Black Fox 8. It is not a travel book in a classic sense- the author gives you a window to the universe called "Spain" through his own eyes. Forensic methods link the crimes to a string of burglaries. Reminiscent of Robert Hughes's Barcelona, Roads to Santiago is the consummate portrait of Spain for all readers. Nooteboom, a travel writer from Holland, often comments on the then current political situation in Spain referring to historical antecedents to illuminate the present. It was an emotional moment; we were now almost half way to Santiago. This book reminds me of the sort of evocative histories of Spain that I used to read when I was first learning about Spanish history back in high school, many, many years ago. And as much as it is the story of his travels, it is an elegant and detailed chronicle of Cees Nooteboom's thirty-five-year love affair with his adopted second country. " The Road to Santiago is an exquisitely written, courageous, and irresistible portrait of a personal pilgrimage in search of a broader understanding of life and self." We’d love your help. Tristan Garel-Jones, Observer. Despite some occasional gems of prose writing it lacked overall narrative drive to maintain my interest. Yet at other times, when his account became personal and he described a monk or woman he had met, an encounter with a cathedral that he loved, a detail that moved him into history that existed at the same time as he did, those were the passages that hooked my eyeballs and I was able to understand. Very dense, at times cerebral. Poignant. Use the HTML below. Like a road itself, sometimes so dry and dusty and Latinate and filled with erudite historical monuments the very words cracked and seemed not to bear the weight of my eyes. This skipping around sometimes seems almost hallucinatory, like some fever dream or drug experience. Roads to Santiago is an evocative travelogue through the sights, sounds, and smells of a little known Spain-its architecture, art, history, landscapes, villages, and people. Almost as much of a slog as the Camino de Santiago. To see what your friends thought of this book, There is a comment from author Paul Theroux suggesting that the tourist is certain, while the traveler is vague. Want to share IMDb's rating on your own site? A tough read and tough to review. P. Coelho If you appreciate literary travel writers such as Jan Morris and Patrick Leigh Fermor, then you'll love this book. A remarkable imagining of the historic voyages of 16th-century explorer and writer Fernão Mendes Pinto, one of the first Europeans to sail to and travel the Orient-- India, Japan, and ... See full summary ». Confession 12. He is enchanted by the Romanesque architecture and his visit to different churches takes a fair portion of the book which felt a little too much sometimes. By the end of Episode 2 they only had 93 km to go to Santiago and now they can't take short cuts, because any more and they won't be credited with an official finish.I see the producers plan to have 3 seasons of this series. Imagine being in jail. The writing is fabulous and the content is interesting enough, but this is not a book I want to sit down and read for an hour. Detective superintendent reopens two unsolved murder cases from the 1980s. The stimulus is always a trip in the remoter parts of Spain, but the subject can be worlds away, and often thoughtfully abstract: how when tradition is forgotten the didactic religious sculpture in cathedrals becomes merely art, why Spanish (and English) became world languages through their colonies while Dutch was never really adopted elsewhere, the eccentricities of Borges, the notion that authors transform and live on in their readers when they die. He writes passionately about his travels across the land, traversing history, culture, and the role of Spain in the modern world. EMBED (for wordpress.com hosted blogs and archive.org item
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