"Bowles is at his best when writing about places. He can evoke a place with a few sure strokes."--New York Times "His work is art. At his best, Bowles has no peer."--Time Travels is a thrilling anthology of the travel writings of Paul Bowles, author of the era-defining post-war novel The Sheltering Sky. The acclaimed essays in Travel--never before collected in a single volume--span more than sixty years and range from Bowles's early days in Paris to his time spent in Ceylon, Thailand, Kenya, and his expatriate life in ...
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"Bowles is at his best when writing about places. He can evoke a place with a few sure strokes."--New York Times "His work is art. At his best, Bowles has no peer."--Time Travels is a thrilling anthology of the travel writings of Paul Bowles, author of the era-defining post-war novel The Sheltering Sky. The acclaimed essays in Travel--never before collected in a single volume--span more than sixty years and range from Bowles's early days in Paris to his time spent in Ceylon, Thailand, Kenya, and his expatriate life in Morocco. Insightful, exciting, and evocative, featuring original photographs throughout, Travels is a stunning collection of rarely seen shorter works--a showcase of the literary artistry of one of the truly great American writers of the twentieth century.
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After reading Paul Bowles' famous novel, "The Sheltering Sky", I read "Let it Come Down" and "The Spider's House", the two novels included with "The Sheltering Sky" in the Library of America compilation of Bowles' novels. I was interested in Bowles and thus turned to this volume, "Travels: Collected Writings" (2010) which offers a broader view of the author from that offered by the novels. Bowles (1910 -- 1999), an American born in Queens, was an outsider and a wanderer through his long life. As a young man, he spent time in Europe and north Africa, among other places. In the middle of a career as a composer in New York City, Bowles moved to Tangier in 1947 and spent the rest of his life as an expatriate. He also changed his career activities to concentrate on writing more than on musical composition.
The 39 travel essays in this volume show a different touch from Bowles' novels. Written over a 40 year period, most of the essays were commissioned by magazines of the time, including "Holiday" "The Nation", "The American Mercury"," "Gentleman's Quarterly" and more. Bowles wrote some of the essays as introductions to books by other writers, while two of the essays are published in this collection for the first time. The writing is accessible and entertaining. Several of the essays are much more extended that would be possible in most magazine writing of today.
The essays show a great deal of immediacy and a sharp power of description. The tone of the pieces is often informal and colloquial with Bowles inviting his readers along as guests. The essays include substantial historical background for places many readers will find exotic and strange. Several essays deal with the same place at different times and slightly different locales, offering varying perspectives. The essays are largely arranged in the order in which they were written. The first two essays, however, describe Bowles' early adventures as a young man in his late teens and early 20's struggling to find his way with little money. These essays present a lively picture of bohemian artistic life in the Paris between the World Wars.
Paris is not the focus of the volume. The reader of this book will travel with Bowles to the Sahara desert, Spain, Ceylon, Turkey, Kenya, Thailand, and India. Most of all, the reader will travel with Bowles to his beloved Morocco. The Moroccan journeys go to places of romance in the reader's imagination, including Tangier, Marrakesh, Casablanca, and Fez. There are also essays on rural life in the Moroccan hills. In the late 1950s, Bowles traveled over 25,000 miles in Morocco to record and preserve the dying traditions of Moroccan folk music. Several extended essays in this book document his efforts. The book covers ancient walled cities with mysterious alleys, winding streets, native cafes and lively bazaars. Bowles teaches the reader a great deal about the interaction between the local populations and the Europeans, and he regrets the impending change to modernity. He is unapologetic about his use of kif, hashish, and other substances. In addition to towns and cities, he portrays beaches, large deserts, mountains, and oceans. He tells stories.
While most of the essays are place-specific, Bowles discusses his view of travel writing in some of the pieces, including, "The Challenge to Identity", first published in 1958 in "The Nation". Bowles writes:
"The subject-matter of the best travel books is the conflict between writer and place. It is not important which of them carries the day, so long as the struggle is faithfully recorded."
*** ****
"The writer must make the decision to adhere to a scrupulous honesty in reporting. Any conscious distortion is equivalent to cheating at solitaire: the purpose of the game is nullified. The account must be as near the truth as he can get, and it seems to me the easiest way to achieve that is to aim for precision in describing his own reactions. A reader can get an idea of what a place is really like only if he knows what its effects were upon someone of whose character he has some idea, of whose preferences he is aware. Thus it seems essential that the writer place a certain insistence upon the objective presentation of his own personality; it provides an interpretative gauge with which the reader can measure for himself the relative importance of each detail, like the scale of miles in the corner of a map."
Bowles admirably carries out his stated purpose for travel writing in the essays collected in this volume.
One of the essays I most enjoyed was "Yallah" which Bowles wrote as an introduction to a book of photographs of the Sahara Desert. The essay captures a great deal of that strange place. The final essay, "Paul Bowles: his Life" is less the story of a journey that an autobiography written in broken, poetic lines. This previously unpublished work offers an introduction to Bowles' life, thinking, and wanderings.
I am not likely to visit many of the places that Bowles describes, or more accurately, the successors to these places in the 21st Century. This book engaged me and put me in touch with the places and people it describes, which is the character of good writing in many genres. It is valuable to have Bowles' travel essays collected and preserved in a single volume. Readers with an interest in Bowles, exotic places, or simply good writing, will enjoy this collection.