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| The elusive art of a modern day travel writer...
Take a deep breath, I tell myself. Be calm. Don't fret, just 'let the phenomena occur'. For a month now I've been pacing the floor, lying under
my desk, trying to decide what book to write next. I'm juggling countries
and ideas; Peru or Portugal, healing or hedonism, love story or road romp.
My editor says that Latin America doesn't sell. A friend at the BBC predicts that Armenia will be in the news next year. 'You MUST go to
Newfoundland,' insists a retired fishing net salesman I meet on a train. I
lose sleep. Drink too much. Go on the wagon. California replaces Peru. I
drop Portugal. I toy with notions of fantasy and ideal societies. I try to
keep as many balls as possible in the air. I try to listen to myself.
This will be my seventh book. The first three were written from the
heart; 'Stalin's Nose' for my uncle, 'The Oatmeal Ark' to understand my
father and 'Under the Dragon' for Burma. It may sound romantic, but it's
the only way that I can motivate myself through two or three years' scribbling. Likewise my fifth book which I wrote to come to terms with the
death of my mother. 'Falling for Icarus' is at once a meditation on love
and a portrait of a small Greek village. My sixth book 'Magic Bus' is
now with my editor and will be published in 2006. As all my books
it interweaves fact and
fiction to reach in a personal and individual way for greater honesty.
So relax, I tell myself. This is how to begin. Be calm and juggle. All I
need to do is pair emotion and curiosity, seize the skeleton of a plot,
then settle on the country and let the journey propel me. Story first.
Or character. Destination next. In that order. I travel in search of the
story that I want to tell.
Time was that travel books were all about travelling. Travel writers
embarked on valiant quests full of derring-do, paddling to the source of
the Limpopo in search of original knowledge. Then the world shrunk.
Day-trippers trampled the wilderness, pausing to picnic in Newby's Hindu
Kush. In once-distant China the Great Leap Forward no longer describes
Mao's economic programme, but rather the surge of tourists rushing to
touch the Great Wall. Bruce Chatwin's isolated Patagonia is now a
holiday home for George Soros and the Benettons. According to the
Financial Times, 20% of 'wilderness' holidaymakers check their e-mail
during a week away. Bhutan is on-line and Carol Smillie makes the
foreign familiar. So how does the modern travel writer return home with
anything more original than an unusual intestinal parasite? 'Old
travellers grumpily complain that travel is now dead,' writes Jonathan
Raban, 'that the world is a suburb. They are quite wrong. Lulled by
familiar resemblances between all the unimportant things, they miss the
brute differences in everything of importance.' Today it is no longer
enough to travel across a country, rather one must travel into it. Into
its society. The travel writer becomes less a geographer of place, more
of the human heart. The 'original knowledge' that he or she brings home
is a collection of subjective impressions. 'Travel writing,' says Colin
Thubron, 'is one culture reporting on another. Its history, more than
most, betrays that objectivity is a chimera.' He adds that uniquely in
literature, outside autobiography, the travel writer acknowledges his
subjectivity. I revel in that partiality. It gives me the freedom to
imagine. Once I manage to stop worrying.
So here I lie
under my desk, juggling fancies, awaiting inspiration. Any time now the
balls will fall into line and the sweeping arc of a rainbow will appear
above Knighton Hill. Or it'll be lunch time. Some time soon story and
destination will merge, I'll hop on a plane and go. I'll travel lightly,
so as to be able to recognise things of value in the arbitrary. I'll not
have many contacts, only one or two. Nor an itinerary which would
disrupt the natural flow of the journey. A fixed itinerary, with a
meeting in Bogota on Monday, and a second in Papayan on Thursday,
hinders the evolution of a journey. It's not theory that drives me
forward, but events, curiosity, intuition. My books come together when
things don't go as I'd planned, or, at least, when I let accidents
happen.
Which means,
as I meet people, my story will change. I'll trust strangers, watch the
sky, follow my nose and make a lot of notes. In eastern Europe I
acquired a reputation for having a weak bladder. In the midst of heated
conversations, my memory saturated, I'd charge off to the loo to
scribble down their dialogue.
>My journey
will last about three months. Any longer and wide-eyed enthusiasm pales.
Familiarity blunts attentiveness. Then, back home, I distil. I combine.
I invent. The journey - and the people whose lives I've shared - anchors
me. I lie on the floor again. I eat too many Hobnobs and M&S
profiteroles then swear off white sugar. 'The truth is not the facts,'
according to Robert Altman. I try to create an honest composite of the
actual encounters. The result is subjective, less documentary, but - I
hope - more true.
Travel writers
seek out wonders. That's our job. Always has been. Always will be. For
me that wonder is in ordinary men and women who are separated by
borders, politics, emigration, even time and death. Through my books I
try to draw together their - and our - divided worlds. My objective is
to enable a reader to understand a society and to empathise with its
people through stories. To make a country and its history accessible.
Before the
invention of photography, painters sought to make images that imitated
the appearance of the world. Similarly before the globe was mapped, it
was the responsibility of explorers and travellers to document facts.
With the introduction of the camera, painting as a realistic form of
expression fell from favour. In the same manner mass travel and
television documentaries are now freeing the travel writer from the need
to detail external realities. The duty of today's travel writer is to
provide a new way of seeing and understanding the world. At least,
that's how it seems to me from under my desk, still tossing around ideas
and destinations. Fret. Juggle. Go.
a version of this article
first appeared in Publishing
News and The Author
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