Theroux, Paul Books

MagicBeanDip.com

Page 1 of 10 - Go to page: 1 2 3 4 5 6

The Great Railway Bazaar

Paul Theroux

The Great Railway Bazaar Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $9.72
List Price: $14.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Mariner Books
Amazon Marketplace: 53 new & used starting at $5.89

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Literary
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> General AAS

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

A peerless and unforgettable travel narrative 5 out of 5 stars.
8 of 8 people found this review helpful.

This fabulous account of getting on the train in London and riding trains (including the decrepit Orient Express) through Europe, across Asia as far east as Japan, then looping back to Europe on the Trans-Siberian, is not a bit dated, even though it was first published in 1975. Theroux is sometimes cross and prickly, but he doesn't miss a thing, and he ventures into places (and eats things) that most people never would. Because he is also a novelist, he's deft at limning the appearances and characters of the people he meets, and these people, who are variously vain, odd, smelly, crazy, foolish, bigoted, or just eccentric, give this travelogue--and indeed all of Theroux's travel narratives--the quality of a Dickens novel. I've read and enjoyed several of his other rail narratives, including "The Old Patagonian Express" (Central and South America) , "Kingdom by the Sea" (United Kingdom), and "Dark Star Safari" (Africa). I'd start with this one, though, with its wonderful section on Vietnam in the last year of the war and its melancholy voyage across Leonid Brezhnev's sclerotic Soviet Union. As with all good books, it will transport you to places you did not know existed, even in this era of Google Earth. As for those who don't care for Theroux's sometimes cranky persona, well, there are always the twittering ecstasies of Peter Mayle ("A Year in Provence," etc.) or--worse--Frances Mayes ("Under the Tuscan Sun," etc.). Theroux's sojourns will never inspire busloads of tourists or the astronomical appreciation of the local real estate.

Editorial Review:

First published more than thirty years ago, Paul Theroux's strange, unique, and hugely entertaining railway odyssey has become a modern classic of travel literature. Here Theroux recounts his early adventures on an unusual grand continental tour. Asia's fabled trains -- the Orient Express, the Khyber Pass Local, the Frontier Mail, the Golden Arrow to Kuala Lumpur, the Mandalay Express, the Trans-Siberian Express -- are the stars of a journey that takes him on a loop eastbound from London's Victoria Station to Tokyo Central, then back from Japan on the Trans-Siberian. Brimming with Theroux's signature humor and wry observations, this engrossing chronicle is essential reading for both the ardent adventurer and the armchair traveler.

The Old Patagonian Express: By Train Through the Americas

Paul Theroux

The Old Patagonian Express: By Train Through the Americas Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $14.35
List Price: $15.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Mariner Books
Amazon Marketplace: 67 new & used starting at $3.39

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> History -> Americas -> United States -> General AAS
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Nonfiction -> Transportation -> Railroads -> General

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 33 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Another Wonderful Travel Expose by the Inimitable Theroux! 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 4 people found this review helpful.

Terrific in every way, as all of Theroux's travel books are! Not a word too many, and not an insight overlooked in this adventure through the Americas. Wonderful, beautiful, and a treasured book in my library.

From Boston to Patagonia by Train 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 5 people found this review helpful.

Note: I made some immature Mormon angry because of my negative reviews of books that attempted to prove the Book of Mormon, and that person has been slamming my reviews almost as fast as they are posted.

So, your "helpful" votes are appreciated. Thanks, and note that a short review is not necessarily a bad review if it leads you to a great book.

From Boston to Patagonia by train. What an adventure. As I wrote in my review of the "Great Railway Bazaar," treat yourself to traveling the easy way and read one of Paul Theroux's books.

Peter Mathiessen described the "Old Patagonian Express" perfectly: "Sharp-eyed, honest, and exceptionally well-written...an implacable landscape, conveyed through a series of marvelous encounters."

Editorial Review:

Starting with a rush-hour subway ride to South Station in Boston to catch the Lake Shore Limited to Chicago, Theroux winds up on the poky, wandering Old Patagonian Express steam engine, which comes to a halt in a desolate land of cracked hills and thorn bushes. But with Theroux the view along the way is what matters: the monologuing Mr. Thornberry in Costa Rica, the bogus priest of Cali, and the blind Jorge Luis Borges, who delights in having Theroux read Robert Louis Stevenson to him.

The Mosquito Coast

Paul Theroux

The Mosquito Coast Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $10.17
List Price: $14.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Mariner Books
Amazon Marketplace: 59 new & used starting at $2.42

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Genre Fiction -> Action & Adventure
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Contemporary

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 71 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Dark, disturbing and utterly enthralling 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

Who hasn't dreamed of leaving the world behind and venturing into the unknown to recreate the world without imperfections?

Seeking to escape globalisation, commercialism, and a multitude of abominations and maladies, inventor and genius Allie Fox abandons civilisation and heads for the Honduran rain forest, taking his family.

Whereas the missionaries he so despises use the pretence of bringing religion to the forest in order to colonise it - as did the conquistadors in the 16th century - Allie brings ice: the symbol of his god-like ingenuity - and sets about creating a new world free of the poisons of the West. However, Allie maybe a genius in one sense, but his socialist ideals and visions of utopia are far from infallible.

Although The Mosquito Coast sounds like a contemporary version of Henry David Thoreau's Walden (which, like this story, is also an allegorical fable) it's an infinitely darker exploration of flawed genius - made all the more disturbing by being presented through the eyes of Allie's twelve year old son, a child on the brink of manhood.

For me, the biggest attraction to this story aside from the travel aspect is the fact that it can be read on so many levels. At once it's a book children will understand and enjoy, but as an allegory a lot of people will see the deeper meanings and lessons - the implications of our own actions and how they can affect others - and possibly learn from them.

Overall, a fantastic book which can be re-read and studied many times.

Editorial Review:

In a breathtaking adventure story, the paranoid and brilliant inventor Allie Fox takes his family to live in the Honduran jungle, determined to build a civilization better than the one they've left. Fleeing from an America he sees as mired in materialism and conformity, he hopes to rediscover a purer life. But his utopian experiment takes a dark turn when his obsessions lead the family toward unimaginable danger.

Sir Vidia's Shadow: A Friendship Across Five Continents

Paul Theroux

Sir Vidia's Shadow: A Friendship Across Five Continents Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $10.20
List Price: $15.00
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Mariner Books
Amazon Marketplace: 42 new & used starting at $2.23

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Biographies & Memoirs -> Arts & Literature -> Authors
Subjects -> Biographies & Memoirs -> General
Subjects -> Biographies & Memoirs -> General AAS

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 73 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

In several of his recent fictions, Paul Theroux has visibly mined his own experience for raw material, going so far as to provide the protagonist of My Other Life with his own name and curriculum vitae. Now, in Sir Vidia's Shadow, he casts a cold and cantankerous eye on his friendship with V.S. Naipaul. The two first met in Uganda in 1966, when the 23-year-old Theroux was teaching at the local university and trying, with only limited success, to transform himself into a writer. The arrival of Naipaul--at 34 already a world-class novelist, with A House for Mr. Biswas under his belt--was a signal event in Theroux's life: "I had been working in the dark, just groping, until I had met Vidia."

After being squired around Uganda, Kenya, and Rwanda by the author, Naipaul returned to London. Their correspondence continued, and the relationship--in which Theroux was very much the junior partner and acolyte--deepened. During a holiday visit to London the next year, he realized that their rapport "was as strong as love. He was my friend, he had shown me what was good in my writing, he had drawn a line through anything that was false." And indeed, over the next three decades the two exchanged a steady stream of letters, visits, phone calls, and authorial confidences. Yet this most productive of literary friendships came to an abrupt end in 1996, when Naipaul--now knighted and recently remarried--burned a number of bridges and tossed his relationship with Theroux into the conflagration.

All of which brings us to Sir Vidia's Shadow, a peculiar mixture of autobiography, Boswellian chronicle, and poison-pen letter. In many ways, it's a fascinating and devilishly skilled performance. For starters, Theroux spent more time in his subject's company than Boswell ever spent in Johnson's, which gives his portrait a widescreen verisimilitude. He documents Naipaul's loony fastidiousness, his passion for language, "the laughter in his lungs like a loud kind of hydraulics," and the very sound of his typewriter (which, just for the record, goes chick-chick-chick). Theroux also gives a superb sense of how such literary apprenticeships can function to the mutual benefit of master and disciple--and how they can erode. By 1975, after all, Theroux had become the bestselling author of The Great Railway Bazaar, while Naipaul remained an under-remunerated critics' darling. Out of habit, Theroux stayed in the older man's shadow. Still, as the book progresses, it becomes harder and harder to tell precisely who's got the anxiety and who's got the influence.

It also becomes harder and harder to ignore Theroux's late-breaking animus toward his subject. His goal--stated not only in the book but in various tailgunning replies to his critics--was to write an accurate account of a long, rich friendship. "This narrative is not something that would be improved by the masks of fiction," he declares. "It needs only to be put in order. I am free of the constraint of alteration and fictionalizing." Yet every book has a tendency to break free of the author's intentions, and Sir Vidia's Shadow is no exception. For each reverent (and convincing) passage about his subject, there's another in which Theroux seems to be administering some deeply ambivalent payback. He contrasts Naipaul's sexless misogyny with his own erotic enthusiasm, and his own generosity with his hero's miserly behavior (although Naipaul's penny-pinching and check-dodging can make him strangely endearing--the Jack Benny of contemporary letters). At times Theroux seems determined to explore all seven types of ambiguity, which makes for both deliberate and not-so-deliberate hilarity. He also sounds uncannily like a spurned lover. And perhaps that residue of expired passion accounts for both the brilliance of Sir Vidia's Shadow and its disturbing, sometimes queasy pathos. --James Marcus

Fresh Air Fiend: Travel Writings

Paul Theroux

Fresh Air Fiend: Travel Writings Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $10.85
List Price: $15.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Mariner Books
Amazon Marketplace: 80 new & used starting at $0.41

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> General -> General AAS
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> General AAS

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 24 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

Paul Theroux may be pompous, self-important, cynical, and grumpy. He may even be, as accused by a heckler in Australia, "a wanker." So what? The man is prolific--having penned 36 books--and when he's inspired, his insights and sparkling writing are so startling that it's easy to forgive him for his occasional crankiness. Besides, as he reminds readers frequently, he is a man who takes pen to paper for a living; as the title essay points out: "Normal, happy, well-balanced individuals seldom become imaginative writers...."

In Fresh Air Fiend, Theroux's pen serves him well with astute, lively pieces that stray far beyond simple "travel essays" and reveal his self-inflicted lifestyle of compulsive travel, writing, and alienation. In this collection--containing mostly previously published magazine pieces written over the past 15 years--there's a strong autobiographical streak, as well as historical perspectives and a sardonic view on aging. "One of the more bewildering aspects of growing older," he writes in "'Memory and Creation,'" "is that people constantly remind you of things that never happened."

Now nearly 60, Theroux has lived a rich, varied life: the book jumps from post-Mao China and years spent as an Africa-based Peace Corps volunteer in the '60s to turtle watching in Hawaii and kayaking on Cape Cod; the jumbled collection even includes pieces on other travel writers (Bruce Chatwin, Graham Greene, and William Least Heat-Moon) and the film adaptation of his novel The Mosquito Coast. A chronic sense of aloneness permeates all these pieces--be it the lost traveler paddling through fog, the lone writer living without a phone, or the hermetic trekker who can't speak the native language. Most touching: a short sketch of a road trip when he's lost, his wife is anxious, and the children are fighting; Theroux doesn't want the moment to end and soon enough he returns to his self-imposed alienation. It's that perpetual sense of loneliness and not fitting in that seems to motivate Theroux in many of these essays. Theroux may be getting older, even nostalgic, but as these vibrant essays show, he sure isn't getting stale. --Melissa Rossi

Riding the Iron Rooster: By Train Through China

Paul Theroux

Riding the Iron Rooster: By Train Through China Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $10.85
List Price: $15.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Mariner Books
Amazon Marketplace: 48 new & used starting at $3.17

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Classics -> Chinese
Subjects -> Travel -> Asia -> China -> General

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Along for the ride 4 out of 5 stars.
6 of 7 people found this review helpful.

The book, like a long train trip, gets tiring after a while, but Theroux loves traveling this way. His observations of the people, land and culture are well worth reading.

Editorial Review:

Paul Theroux, the author of the train travel classics The Great Railway Bazaar and The Old Patagonian Express, takes to the rails once again in this account of his epic journey through China. He hops aboard as part of a tour group in London and sets out for China's border. He then spends a year traversing the country, where he pieces together a fascinating snapshot of a unique moment in history. From the barren deserts of Xinjiang to the ice forests of Manchuria, from the dense metropolises of Shanghai, Beijing, and Canton to the dry hills of Tibet, Theroux offers an unforgettable portrait of a magnificent land and an extraordinary people.

Journey Without Maps (Penguin Classics)

Graham Greene

Journey Without Maps (Penguin Classics) Graham Greene Amazon Price: $10.20
List Price: $15.00
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Penguin Classics
Amazon Marketplace: 36 new & used starting at $8.62

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> World Literature -> British -> Classics -> Greene, Graham
Subjects -> Travel -> Africa -> Coastal West Africa

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

In the heart of darkness, a ray of light 4 out of 5 stars.
11 of 11 people found this review helpful.

Graham Greene is a famous 20th C novelist ("The Orient Express") who also wrote a few travel accounts. This is his first, when he was 31 years old and left Europe for the first time in his life to experience the uncivilized "dark heart of Africa" by traveling through the back country of Liberia in 1935. It was a 4-week, 350-mile walk, mostly through an unchanging tunnel forest path, ending each day in a primitive village. He had about a dozen black porters who would carry him in a sling, although he walked much of the way.

It's written with a very "old school" perspective, with one foot in the 19th (or 18th) century of romantic colonial imperialism, and one foot in the pre-war 1930s perspective of deterioration, rot and things falling apart. Heavy whiskey drinking, descriptions of the festering diseases of the natives, and plethora of bothersome insects, the run down European outposts and a motley cast of white rejects fill many descriptive pages.

It reminds me a lot of Samuel Johnson's "Journals of the Western Isles" (1770s) when Johnson, who had never left England in his life, decided to go to Scotland to see what uncivilized people were like. Just as Johnson brought Boswell who would go on to write his own version of the trip, Greene brought his female cousin Barbara Greene (who remains unnamed in the book and largely unmentioned), who went on to write her own version of the trip in the 1970s called "Too Late to Turn Back", which mostly contradicts Grahams version.

I can't say I totally enjoyed this book, I found Greene's attitude irritating - but therein lies its value, as a snapshot of prewar European zeitgeist. It is reminiscent of "Kabloona" (1940), another prewar travel account to an uncivilized place (Arctic Eskimos) by a young European aristocrat, who also is deeply inward looking and finds a new perspective and appreciation for the "cave man" people he meets. It's very much a transition period between prewar and post-war attitudes and the fluctuation's back and forth, the sense of things falling apart, but also new-found perspective, make it a challenging but interesting work.

Editorial Review:

His mind crowded with vivid images of Africa, Graham Greene set off in 1935 to discover Liberia, a remote and unfamiliar republic founded for released slaves. Now with a new introduction by Paul Theroux, Journey Without Maps is the spellbinding record of Greene’s journey. Crossing the red-clay terrain from Sierra Leone to the coast of Grand Bassa with a chain of porters, he came to know one of the few areas of Africa untouched by colonization. Western civilization had not yet impinged on either the human psyche or the social structure, and neither poverty, disease, nor hunger seemed able to quell the native spirit. BACKCOVER: “One of the best travel books [of the twentieth] century.”
—Norman Sherry

“Journey Without Maps and The Lawless Roads reveal Greene’s ravening spiritual hunger, a desperate need to touch rock bottom within the self and in the humanly created world.”
—The Times Higher Education Supplement

Pillars of Hercules

Paul Theroux

Pillars of Hercules Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $11.56
List Price: $17.00
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Ballantine Books
Amazon Marketplace: 81 new & used starting at $0.52

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Travel -> Reference & Tips -> Essays & Travelogues
Subjects -> Travel -> Specialty Travel -> Adventure -> General

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 38 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

A gorgeous bit of writing. 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

I have read five of Paul Theroux's travel books: The Great Railway Bazaar, The Kingdom by the Sea, The Old Patagonian Express, Travel Fiend and now The Pillars of Hercules. I can say without a doubt, that this is my favorite travelogue of his. The book is concise and knowledgable and shows erudition lacking in most travelogues.

It is a total learning experience. I have looked up more words in this book than in most books I read. And I really appreciate that. He doesn't write books for people who are looking to read about the surface of a culture, or who just want the interesting bits revealed to them. He writes books for people that are truly interested and will take the time to learn all that he supplies the reader.

And I think this is his crowning achievement!

Editorial Review:

Paul Theroux has developed one of travel writing's most identifiable styles: always the foreigner, always a bit apart, slightly irascible, but perfectly observant. At last he has ventured to one of the most traveled places on earth, and returned with his most exhilarating, revealing, and eloquent travel book. In this modern version of the Grand Tour, Theroux sets off from Gibraltar, one of the fabled Pillars of Hercules, on a glorious journey around the shores of the Mediterranean.

The Elephanta Suite: Three Novellas

Paul Theroux

The Elephanta Suite: Three Novellas Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $16.50
List Price: $25.00
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Houghton Mifflin
Amazon Marketplace: 58 new & used starting at $1.65

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Short Stories -> United States
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Short Stories -> General

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 25 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

A master of the travel narrative weaves three intertwined novellas of Westerners transformed by their sojourns in India.

This startling, far-reaching book captures the tumult, ambition, hardship, and serenity that mark today's India. Theroux's Westerners risk venturing far beyond the subcontinent's well-worn paths to discover woe or truth or peace. A middle-aged couple on vacation veers heedlessly from idyll to chaos. A buttoned-up Boston lawyer finds succor in Mumbai's reeking slums. And a young woman befriends an elephant in Bangalore.

We also meet Indian characters as singular as they are reflective of the country's subtle ironies: an executive who yearns to become a holy beggar, an earnest young striver whose personality is rewired by acquiring an American accent, a miracle-working guru, and others.

As ever, Theroux's portraits of people and places explode stereotypes to exhilarating effect. The Elephanta Suite urges us toward a fresh, compelling, and often inspiring notion of what India is, and what it can do to those who try to lose--or find--themselves there.

The Kingdom by the Sea: A Journey Around the Coast of Great Britain

Paul Theroux

The Kingdom by the Sea: A Journey Around the Coast of Great Britain Paul Theroux Amazon Price: $10.17
List Price: $14.95
Usually ships in 24 hours
By: Mariner Books
Amazon Marketplace: 54 new & used starting at $0.01

Buy at Amazon.com

Browse similar items by category:
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> ( T ) -> Theroux, Paul
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> Literary
Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> General AAS

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 2.5 of 5

Fine writer gets trapped in bad plan 1 out of 5 stars.
6 of 9 people found this review helpful.

Theroux's interesting but illstarred plan was to meet the English by travelling around the coast, on foot and by train. Real English, real conversations. He was twenty years too late. About a month into this disaster it's becoming obvious that even the lower middle class have abandoned the gray, chilly English coastal towns for cheap jumbo jets to sunny climes. The old resorts have become God's Waiting Room and battlegrounds for the skinhead urban poor. Chapters go by without him seeing a child, or a real family, only potty old people who hate foreigners. These aren't "the English." Poor Theroux. Read his fine book on China instead.

Editorial Review:

After eleven years as an American living in London, the renowned travel writer Paul Theroux set out to travel clockwise around the coast of Great Britain to find out what the British were really like. The result is this perceptive, hilarious record of the journey. Whether in Cornwall or Wales, Ulster or Scotland, the people he encountered along the way revealed far more of themselves than they perhaps intended to display to a stranger. Theroux captured their rich and varied conversational commentary with caustic wit and penetrating insight.

Page 1 of 10 - Go to page: 1 2 3 4 5 6

Return to MagicBeanDip.com

This page was created in 1.2552 seconds.