I'm most of the way through Hot Countries, Alec Waugh, a travel book published in 1930. Most interesting aspect of it is the fact that tourism was a well-established activity, but air travel was as yet unknown. As he mostly is visiting islands, it is all done via ships.
Second most interesting aspect is that European colonialism was the unchallenged rule throughout the world. Waugh includes several matter-of-fact discussions of the problem of white men posted to the tropics who were only able to find brown-skinned sex partners, and how this worked out for all the parties involved. There are many heavily racist remarks scattered through the book, but they are cloaked in such a thick covering of it's-all-for-their-own-good paternalism that I doubt the author ever noticed the disconnect between his liberalism and his racism.
Most irritating thing about the book: he splices in about 40 pages of an unfinished and unfocussed novella set in tahiti, on the pretext that it is enlightening to the reader, whereas the truth is he was just padding shamelessly.
― Aimless, Thursday, 29 December 2011 21:01 (twelve years ago) link
Alec Waugh, Alec Waugh... I can't remember whether he was the brother of Evelyn or the template for Waring in What's Become of Waring by Anthony Powell, or both or neither.
Some of Evelyn's travel writing is excellent as well.
― Fizzles, Thursday, 29 December 2011 22:26 (twelve years ago) link
Franny and Zooey. Superb. Ok the mysticism is so-so, ending especially is somewhat damp, but for a fond, sharp, and beautifully detailed portrait of a family it is peerless.
― ledge, Friday, 30 December 2011 10:12 (twelve years ago) link
Ok maybe not peerless. If you know of any peers toss them this way.
― ledge, Friday, 30 December 2011 10:13 (twelve years ago) link
Alec was Evelyn's older brother. The racism has become even more explicit toward the end, where he is discussing haiti. Several times now he has called blacks "stupid" and he fully buys into the idea that mulattos are smarter, because they have less "savage blood".
― Aimless, Friday, 30 December 2011 16:31 (twelve years ago) link
Disposed of Alec Waugh. I am now starting Pale Fire. It may be too clever for me, like those little wooden puzzles where a sphere is constructed out of eight or so angular pieces you must fit together, but it's too soon to say.
― Aimless, Sunday, 1 January 2012 20:46 (twelve years ago) link
just finished stone arabia, and by extension all three spiotta novels in about a month and a half.
find something that works and stick with it, right?
― cad, Monday, 2 January 2012 03:50 (twelve years ago) link