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Women's Fiction
Transylvania and Beyond: A Travel Memoir

Transylvania and Beyond: A Travel Memoir

List Price: $21.95
Your Price: $21.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Transylvania on a daily basis
Review: A fairly descriptive diary of a journey to many interesting places in Transylvania, a very multicultural section of the world with an exciting history. The journey of the author itself is quite adventurous, and we get a pretty good glimpse of the daily lives of the people who live there. My only problem with the book was that the author often seemed to be prejudiced against Hungarians (or Magyars),in fact at some point she calls the Magyars (as a whole) arrogant psychopaths. There is quite a bit of ethnic tension in Transylvania even today, it would be helpful if someone was able to give an unbiased account of the situation.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Dervla Murphy: Romania unvarnished - make mine a double.
Review: Dervla Murphy travels by bicycle, mule, or foot, then comes back to tell all - warts and all. She has courage and integrity - and a disarmingly unmannered charm - and deploys these gifts in each of her books to capture the immediacy and difficult beauty of landscapes and peoples often on the wrong side of "progress".

From her first day - robbed of her belongings, save for a couple bottles of Irish whiskey - Ms Murphy takes the reader on a journey into the tormented soul of Transylvania, a beautiful land of forests and mountains, fought over by Hungarians, Germans, Szekelys, and Romanians for centuries. She shares her impressions of land and people, not with an air of authority, but rather with a sense of candour and compassion. Perhaps too abrupt, sometimes wrong-headedly opinionated, but a single cussed Murphy sentence as often as not trumps a bookshelf-load of expert opinions.

If you do NOT enjoy unbridled enthusiasm, a thirst for adventure and local hooch, obstinate cussedness in the face of know-it-alls and tiresome do-gooders, then do NOT read these books. If you DO enjoy these traits, and wish to spend a very pleasant evening or two with an engaging woman, do read Dervla Murphy's books (by all means start with "Full Tilt", her classic first book).

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointed
Review: I ordered and read this book in advance of a planned trip to Romania with a church group that is building orphanages and working to help abandoned kids there. Ms. Murphy's book was helpful in showing the deplorable state the Communist regime left Romania and one must marvel at the hospitality shown by people who are living, in many cases, in poverty unknown in the Western world. And I admired her ability to travel solo throughout the troubled nation (on foot and bicycle, no less!), and felt for her when she suffered physical injury and stolen possessions.

However, I found it extremely disappointing that Ms. Murphy chooses to mock a couple of Romania's favorable cultural attributes -- she is baffled by people's "old fashion" views of limiting sexual relationships to marriage, and she sees liberalizing the country's strict abortion laws as a positive step. Finally, she is strident in her opposition to the first Gulf War, slams Margaret Thatcher, believes the United States is successfully peddling propaganda to not only a gullible Romania but gullible West as well, (I guess people in democracies with access to all sorts of information are too stupid to make up their own mind...at least if they tilt right), and late in the book she apparently fails to understand the views held by many Americans that our nation feels blessed by God and a responsibility to share that blessing as well as His message of Salvation.

If you share Ms. Murphy's liberal views, you'll probably enjoy this book. If not, then they may cast a pall on the rest of her observations, which may be quite enlightening. It would have been nice if the reader would have been warned of the author's worldview up front.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Raw, uncensored & ecclectic
Review: Murphy's mobile diary captures Romania in all its splendor and squalor. Refreshingingly opinionated, she rushes the reality of Romania into your face and beyond!


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