Here is the new collection of essays from Matthew Stevenson, a contributing editor of Harper'' ?s Magazine who lives in Switzerland and who is the author of the critically acclaimed Letters of Transit: Essays on Travel, History, Politics, and Family Life Abroad, which the poet Robert Watson called "a stunning book, the best travel writing I have seen in years." In 1991, Stevenson moved from Brooklyn to a house in the vineyards outside Geneva, Switzerland. In this book he writes about his travels around Europe ("On a hot July evening, in the company of other backpackers, we boarded the midnight Geneva-Trieste express and scrambled to our compartment, so that long into the night children could bicker about who was most deserving of the upper bunks.") and his impressions of visiting the United States ("the size of the suburban houses made me think America has become a nation of great Gatsbys.") In these essays, Stevenson, with wit and insight, describes crossing Poland by bicycle, the countries of former Yugoslavia, visiting the battlefields of Okinawa, and Albania'' ?s brave new world ("The province of pyramid schemes and stolen cars"). He explores the myths of Omaha Beach and Steven Spielberg'' ?s Saving Private Ryan ("a war movie by a guy who has seen a lot of war movies"). Whenin New York after September 11, he recalls his earlier visits to Asian battlefields ("the skeletal frame of the Trade Center evokes the dome at Hiroshima").
I feel like I have been at a feast of experience and ideas. Traveling with Matt Stevenson through his book "Letters of Transit," has been an enjoyable treat. Glimpses of Russia, Fiji, Africa, Ireland and islands in the Pacific were described with poetic language, clear pictures of the economy and political aspects and the excitement of venturing into different lands. A description of Mexico City as seen from a mountain top castle is vivid and imaginative:"Cars raced around the narrow streets and the imperial boulevards like so many rats searching the maze. And in the distance I saw rows of houses, like the surf appropriating a dune, washing up the sides of the hills.As an economist he discusses the Russian system with insight and understanding. One feels like he is talking to a friend. He is good company.My favorite parts of the book are those in which he visits the battlegrounds where his father fought. He familiarizes us with the problems of war and steeps us in nostalgia. I know his father and so the quotes from him are particularly interesting, admirable and poignant in these times. He quotes other military comrades of his father, "There is the way I dreamed I fought, and the way I wish I had fought...the way I think I fought and that is the story I told here."Reading this book has been a stimulant to my intellect, a treat to my senses and a good time with a newly found companion.
Thoughts by a traveler who has been around the world
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
Letters Of Transit: Essays On Travel, History, Politics, And Family Life Abroad by banker and essayist Matthew Stevenson is a sizeable and impressive compendium of original thoughts by a traveler who has been around the world, including Switzerland, Serbia, Northern Ireland, South Africa, and the Middle East. Stevenson writes with a clear and articulate view of the tangled morass of human politics, cultures, and events he has observed and considered. From a human look at the battle of Guadalcanal and its fallout to the current, not-so-happy state of the Russian economy to the crossroads of destiny at South Korea, Letters Of Transit is a compelling, informed and informative view of people and events around the globe, and a breathtaking, thoughtful look at what the future might have in store.
An insightful book ? especially for Afghanistan
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Matthew Stevenson writes about many things in this hefty volume - and it is especially interesting to read about his visits to Afghansitan, Pakistan, and other places.
You Call this a Vacation?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Fortunately, life in Switzerland is dull, thus permitting the author's family to rest between holidays. Their vacations sound like the tourist equivalent of cold showers--character building, but uncomfortable. I've read some of these essays over the years in the American Spectator--where they remind us that it is more than the house organ of the vast right-wing conspiracy. What makes this collection remarkable is that Stevenson takes us to some of the world's most prominent hot spots--Serbia, Palestinian refugee camps, Argentina, Northern Ireland--during periods of relative repose, when we can meet the people and appreciate the human dimensions behind the catastrophic headlines. Stevenson does his homework--like all good travel writing, these essays mix history with sights, smells and conversation as effortlessly as gin with vermouth. "The Playing Fields of Terrorism" should be required reading, and "Dealing in Russia" shows uncommon insight into the difficulties of doing business in a transitional economy.
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