Skip to main content

Traveller’s tales

Of encounters in far-flung places.


Footloose and Fancy-free; Prema Srinivasan. For copies contact Prema Srinivasan, 12 Parthasarathy Gardens, Kasturi Ranga Road, Alwarpet, Chennai 18 or e-mail prema_49@rediffmail.com

For one who doesn’t like to travel, the best way to learn about other places is travel books. Sit back and let the writer take you to all those places that you’ve heard of or wonder about…

Prema Srinivasan’s Footloose and Fancy-free covers all the known territories: the U.S., the U.K., Europe, Australia, South Africa… India gets a look-in with Shimla, Puducherry and Tranquebar.

Down memory lane

In her preface, the author mentions that most of these were places she had visited with her family; some are reprints of articles published earlier in newspapers and magazines. The first piece, a trip down memory lane, on the Mylapore area of Chennai is perhaps the most evocative. The images of a laidback charming place are in sharp contrast to the congested, traffic-heavy Mylapore we know today.

Israel begins Srinivasan’s journeys in real earnest. From there you follow her through Switzerland, Greece, the Salisbury Plains, Wessex; Vienna, Yellowstone National Park, South Africa…. Srinivasan sticks to the tried and tested. Greece, Egypt and Israel, for instance, are seen through the prism of myth and history; her descriptions of Wessex are interspersed with references to Thomas Hardy’s books; Shimla’s imperial past is invoked; in Yellowstone and South Africa, the focus is on natural beauty.

Her text encompasses history, geography, occasionally economics…. Very rarely does her personal view peep through. But that seems to have been her intention. The blurb on the rear cover says that the book “attempts to take the reader across accustomed thresholds, to places known by reputation…” Of the various pieces, the ones that really hold attention are The Aborigine Experience and Cornwall. Overall this is a book to dip into; choose your place, flip through the photographs and dig in for a learning experience.

source: http://www.hindu.com/lr/2009/10/04/stories/2009100450170400.htm

Popular posts from this blog

Cricket Future Tours Program Till 2020

Month Tournament Details Apr - May 2015 IPL 2015   Matches: 76 T20  Venue:   India June 2015 India tour of Bangladesh 2015   Matches: 2 Test and 3 ODI  Venue:   Bangladesh August 2015 Pakistan tour of India 2015   Matches: Unknown  Venue:   India September 2015 Champions League T20 2015   Matches: 23 T20  Venue:   N/A Oct - Dec 2015 South Africa tour of India 2015   Matches: 3 Test, 7 ODI and 2 T20  Venue:   India Dec 2015 - Jan 2016 Sri Lanka tour of India 2015-16   Matches: 3 Test  Venue:   India Jan - Feb 2016 Australia tour of India 2016   Matches: 7 ODI and 2 T20  Venue:   India Feb - Mar 2016 India tour of West Indies 2016   Matches: 3 Test, 5 ODI and 1 T20  Venue:   West Indies Mar - Apr 2016 T20 World Cup 2016   Matches: 27 T20  Venue:   India Apr - Jun 2016 IPL 2016   Matches: 76 T20  Venue:   India May 2016 West Indi...

A flair for the unusual

From a sluggish first half, Solo takes flight to a surreal world. Solo; Rana Dasgupta, HarperCollins, Rs. 395. With Solo , Rana Dasgupta again demonstrates an unusual flair for the short story; for, though Solo is a novel, it is really the self-contained, story-like chapters of the second half of the book that are remarkable. In the latter part, the writing frees itself from an uneasy heavy-handedness that slows down and mars the book’s first part. No doubt the first half is meant to give readers a sense of the sluggish, unrelenting pathos of real life (which does get through), however the structure seems unable to prevent the reading from occasionally becoming a little tedious. But, for a large part of the first half, Solo does read well; a few sharp cuts might have prevented readers from getting a little fed with how long it takes the writer to show us what life means for the 100-year-old, blind Ulrich, sitting alone in his derelict flat and re-membering his own listless past and ...

IAM BIG FAN OF Camp WWE Stephanie McMahon

 IAM BIG FAN OF Camp WWE Stephanie McMahon,Height: 5' 7" (1.7 m),Star Sign: Libra #WWE #TripelH