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| A few years
ago on a windy spring morning in an ancient Cretan village surrounded by
mountains, I fell to earth. My mother had died a few months earlier and
a single obsession had risen from my grief: the notion to build a
feather-light flying machine. And so, on the island where Daedalus and
Icarus had made man's maiden flight, I journeyed back to beginnings,
back into the Greek myths, and - with the help of my neighbours
and plenty of effervescent wine - built a plane and tried to fly.
'Falling for Icarus' is at once a meditation on love, a celebration of the passion
for flight and a portrait of the Cretans. These remarkable people
-- including villagers Apostoli, a bat-eared Greek god in a golden flying suit,
dreamy, dying Aphrodite, Yioryio the irrepressible café owner and Nikos
the Winged Priest with his tall stories of life as an air steward --
became my friends. Their kindness and rootedness restored my faith in life. Their
understanding and raw, unpredictable, admirable energy enabled me to
give wings to a dream. A dream that transformed sadness.
'Falling for
Icarus' was chosen as a Book of the Year by Colin Thubron in the Sunday
Telegraph, Jan Morris in the Spectator and Anthony Sattin in the Sunday
Times.
Now check out the
photos or click below for the YouTube video -- then pour yourself an ouzo and ask, 'But will it fly?'
'The heart-warming
evocation of one man's loving obsession: lyrical, funny, compassionate'
Colin Thubron
'an extraordinary work,
curious and entertaining, tantilizing, often moving and above all
entirely original -- like everything he writes, it's in a genre of its
own' Jan Morris
'An intimate geography of the author's own heart and a
masterly observation of the power of the story to comfort, strengthen
and transform the hearts of humanity at large. Destined to become
a classic.' James Jauncey, The Scotsman
'Falling
for Icarus' is published by Penguin in the UK, BB Art in the Czech Republic
and Sartorio Editore in Italy.
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