Rating:  Summary: Christopher McKee Review: If anyone requires an introduction to Theroux's work, this book is it, combining the best elements from his works of fiction and non-fiction. Theroux is perhaps one of the few writers in the US who offers something that is interesting to his readers, as opposed to oftentimes mundane or pedestrian observations that most of us have arrived at already or would under similar circumstances. For one thing Theroux is particularly good at stripping away the pretentions of the English lower-middle class. (He does this with many classes, but this one seems to be the victim more often than others) Take , for example, his note on on life in the inner suburbs of London: 'the secrets,the hurts, the whispers, the stifled lust...the savagery of the workplace; the eternally twitching curtains.' If anybody has spent time in this area, or have been inflicted by the presence of those with similar roots, I suspect he/she will find more than enough satisfaction in knowing that others are on the same page, as it were. Almost all of the chapters in this collection are worth reading, and some several times over. Try "Parasites I Have Known," and his views on other writers, from Chatwin to Simpson. All and all, a good read, and Fresh Air Fiend should be a nice introduction to other Theroux pieces.
Rating:  Summary: A good book Review: One of the many reasons I like this book is because Theroux tells you about other writers. Reading it makes you want to read their books.
Rating:  Summary: Paul Theroux Fiend Review: Paul Theroux has long been noted for his alleged crankiness, his opinionated and occasionally slightly sour observations, both in his travel literature and his fiction. I disagree, and here's why: he repeatedly tells the reader the premises upon which he bases his writing, being that he is not interested in merely explaining the hill or river ahead, but the millionaire next to him who is busy displaying his ignorance to anyone who will listen, or the comments of the oarsman who guides Theroux to the next isle in the South Pacific. These people are far more memorable, and speak with true universality to the human condition thru Theroux's wonderful, trained ear for language. Therefore, reading Theroux is like being introduced to unique individuals on a global scale without leaving your room. Am I likely to get to Guam in this lifetime? No. Do I have a richer feel for the people and the environs of the South Pacific having read Fresh Air Fiend, and the Friendly Isles, you betcha! And you will also!
Rating:  Summary: Paul Theroux Fiend Review: Paul Theroux has long been noted for his alleged crankiness, his opinionated and occasionally slightly sour observations, both in his travel literature and his fiction. I disagree, and here's why: he repeatedly tells the reader the premises upon which he bases his writing, being that he is not interested in merely explaining the hill or river ahead, but the millionaire next to him who is busy displaying his ignorance to anyone who will listen, or the comments of the oarsman who guides Theroux to the next isle in the South Pacific. These people are far more memorable, and speak with true universality to the human condition thru Theroux's wonderful, trained ear for language. Therefore, reading Theroux is like being introduced to unique individuals on a global scale without leaving your room. Am I likely to get to Guam in this lifetime? No. Do I have a richer feel for the people and the environs of the South Pacific having read Fresh Air Fiend, and the Friendly Isles, you betcha! And you will also!
Rating:  Summary: Paul's Peregrinations Review: Paul Theroux is highly prolific, highly opinionated, a bit of an intellectual snob and a very good writer. He has produced a large body of fiction as well as many travel books like "Riding the Iron Rooster" (across China by train), "The Pillars of Hercules" (recounting his peregrinations around the Mediterranean) and "The Happy Islands of Oceania" (where he briefly gets stuck into Australians). Theroux is like a more choleric and worldlier Bill Bryson except that he is a writer of greater depth who was probably appalled by Bryson's effusive and almost fulsome praise of Australia in "Down Under". The latter writer wears his heart on his sleeve and his humour is more penetrable whereas Theroux is also capable of great wit and biting humour (this is especially evinced in a story from his collection "My Other Life", where he recounts his meeting (the reader isn't sure if it is a completely fictional account) with a serene Her Majesty and an extremely irascible Duke of Edinburgh). While there is humour in "Fresh-Air Fiend" there is no laugh-out-loud stuff like the piece just mentioned or like most of Bryson's tales. Sometimes you can get irritated by Theroux's somewhat supercilious superiority but there is no denying the quality of his writing. Theroux has none of the couch-potato tendencies of Bryson and would probably scoff at Bryson's Appalachian epiphanies in "A Walk in the Woods" - he is well aware of the dangers of solipsism in a solitary travelling writer, as he says in a piece about camping in the Maine woods: "..no reader ought to be subjected to a pompous discussion of the wilderness experience and the Meaning of Life." Now, is this a manifesto, a dig at one or many other travel writers or just an acidly apt warning to any writer? With Theroux, it is hard to tell, but through the haughtiness which colours much of his work (and provides us with much of the humour because it is funny reading a witty person's description of clueless people) we sometimes get a sense of his vulnerabilities, perhaps even (dare I say it?) his "pain". Nevertheless, we are rarely disabused of any notion that he prefers anyone else's company to his own. He makes many cutting observations of travelling companions, who are generally people he has been forced to commingle with in a railway carriage or on a cruise, yet while he is not a total misanthropist, either towards people in general (he seeks out local people to talk to while travelling) or even other writers (there is a warm appreciation of the work of the late Bruce Chatwin in this volume), there is a lingering smell of cold fish in his prose. Not that this should put you off reading Theroux - as I noted, he is extremely prolific and you are bound to find something by him you like. For Theroux fresh air and wild places are the perfect antidote to the constrictions of a writerly life: "I grow sick of being indoors, alone all day, for several years, needing isolation and at the same time hating the hostage-like atmosphere of alienation. I am sure some writers love this monkish inactivity, but a long spell of it drives me nuts. I think it is also physically unhealthy to be incarcerated like this." And he is a particular type of traveler, as all those train books attest: "Plane travel is very simple and annoying and a cause of anxiety; it is like being at the dentist's, even the chairs are like dentist's chairs. Overland travel is a great deal more trouble, and very slow, but it is uncomfortable in a way that is completely human and often reassuring." "Fresh-Air Fiend" is a far ranging collection and there are some long articles with real substance, especially about China, on which he wrote extensively in "Riding the Iron Rooster". The piece "Down the Yangtze" allows him to compare the huge changes that have occurred in China since he wrote Rooster, when China was emerging from Maoism and all the attendant disasters like the Cultural Revolution. Theroux's piece is thorough and full of epigrammatic observations: "The Chinese have a genius for putting up buildings that are instantly seedy and almost ruinous. The dust clings, the cracks appear as soon as the ribbon is cut. Every building acquires a mid-nineteenth century look almost overnight." (Theroux certainly doesn't attempt to ingratiate himself to a country!) There is also a well-researched and cogent piece on Hong Kong just before its return to China. Theroux has been everywhere but seems to have a particular affinity with Africa - he lived in Uganda as a young man and this book has a long article about sailing down the Zambezi - and a particular fascination with (if not affection for) China. "Fresh-Air Fiend" is as good an introduction as any to his extensive travel writing and because it is a compilation, it covers a whole peripatetic's world.
Rating:  Summary: Excellent travel & writing book Review: Paul Theroux is one of only a few writers for whom I will immediately buy their new hardcovers based on name only, with great anticipation. This one does not disappoint, and I'd rate it right up there with my favorites of his, "My Other Life" and "Sunrise With Seamonsters." His writing on how to travel and how to write and thus how to live one's life is outstanding and inspiring, including the fact that he wrote "The Great Railway Bazaar" in the four months that the train trip took.
Rating:  Summary: The World According To Theroux Review: Thank you, Mr. Theroux, for your journeys across this globe and the inner journeys you bravely put down on paper. Fresh Air Fiend captures the author at his quintessential best. Not only does this latest collection of travel stories bring the world to your feet, but teaches us certain lessons on what it is to be human in todays fast paced world. The writing is crisp, enlightening, and never better. Forget what you think about travel books and pick up this latest from one of the masters, Paul Theroux. It is a worthy addition from the man who brought us "The Mosquito Coast" and "Saint Jack", along with his well regarded travel works.
Rating:  Summary: Vintage Theroux - a treat for fans Review: The title of "Fresh Air Fiend" is a little misleading, as this is a collection of more than just Theroux's travel writings. There are a number of essays on other topics, including some reviews of other writers; I especially enjoyed his enthusiatic review of McPhee's "Looking For a Ship", itself a personal favorite of mine. For so prolific an author Theroux's writing is always of the highest caliber; there are no wasted words in a Theroux novel or travelogue, and yet no important detail goes unrecorded or described. Given this you can see where his enthusiasm for McPhee comes from; his admiration is obvious and freely given.The discussions of Theroux's own novels, and how he came to write them, are also particularly enjoyable and illuminating. The story of "Mosquito Coast" covers not only the writing of the book, but the production of the movie as well, and Theroux's description of how it brought out the "Allie" in all involved- Producer, director, actors- is both witty and revealing. The story behind "Milroy the Magician" will prove interesting to anyone who has read "The Happy Isles of Oceania". The travel stories, which do make up the bulk of the book, will be familiar in scope and tone to anyone who has read Theroux. Here he is, driving through remote Africa, wandering about in Singapore or kayaking alone around Christmas Island amid the wildlife. Reviews of Theroux's travel writing often center on what a misanthrope he must be, or on the accuracy of details and minutia contained in the books. But Theroux himself points out in an essay on his late friend Bruce Chatwin that his books are not meant to be a guide to a country, a people or even a city; they are about the trip itself- his trip, not yours or anyone else's trip. In that sense, even his worst critics must admit that he succeeds marvelously well.
Rating:  Summary: An American Original Review: The title of "Fresh Air Fiend" is a little misleading, as this is a collection of more than just Theroux's travel writings. There are a number of essays on other topics, including some reviews of other writers; I especially enjoyed his enthusiatic review of McPhee's "Looking For a Ship", itself a personal favorite of mine. For so prolific an author Theroux's writing is always of the highest caliber; there are no wasted words in a Theroux novel or travelogue, and yet no important detail goes unrecorded or described. Given this you can see where his enthusiasm for McPhee comes from; his admiration is obvious and freely given. The discussions of Theroux's own novels, and how he came to write them, are also particularly enjoyable and illuminating. The story of "Mosquito Coast" covers not only the writing of the book, but the production of the movie as well, and Theroux's description of how it brought out the "Allie" in all involved- Producer, director, actors- is both witty and revealing. The story behind "Milroy the Magician" will prove interesting to anyone who has read "The Happy Isles of Oceania". The travel stories, which do make up the bulk of the book, will be familiar in scope and tone to anyone who has read Theroux. Here he is, driving through remote Africa, wandering about in Singapore or kayaking alone around Christmas Island amid the wildlife. Reviews of Theroux's travel writing often center on what a misanthrope he must be, or on the accuracy of details and minutia contained in the books. But Theroux himself points out in an essay on his late friend Bruce Chatwin that his books are not meant to be a guide to a country, a people or even a city; they are about the trip itself- his trip, not yours or anyone else's trip. In that sense, even his worst critics must admit that he succeeds marvelously well.
Rating:  Summary: Vintage Theroux - a treat for fans Review: The title of "Fresh Air Fiend" is a little misleading, as this is a collection of more than just Theroux's travel writings. There are a number of essays on other topics, including some reviews of other writers; I especially enjoyed his enthusiatic review of McPhee's "Looking For a Ship", itself a personal favorite of mine. For so prolific an author Theroux's writing is always of the highest caliber; there are no wasted words in a Theroux novel or travelogue, and yet no important detail goes unrecorded or described. Given this you can see where his enthusiasm for McPhee comes from; his admiration is obvious and freely given. The discussions of Theroux's own novels, and how he came to write them, are also particularly enjoyable and illuminating. The story of "Mosquito Coast" covers not only the writing of the book, but the production of the movie as well, and Theroux's description of how it brought out the "Allie" in all involved- Producer, director, actors- is both witty and revealing. The story behind "Milroy the Magician" will prove interesting to anyone who has read "The Happy Isles of Oceania". The travel stories, which do make up the bulk of the book, will be familiar in scope and tone to anyone who has read Theroux. Here he is, driving through remote Africa, wandering about in Singapore or kayaking alone around Christmas Island amid the wildlife. Reviews of Theroux's travel writing often center on what a misanthrope he must be, or on the accuracy of details and minutia contained in the books. But Theroux himself points out in an essay on his late friend Bruce Chatwin that his books are not meant to be a guide to a country, a people or even a city; they are about the trip itself- his trip, not yours or anyone else's trip. In that sense, even his worst critics must admit that he succeeds marvelously well.
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