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The Picador Book of Journeys edited by Robyn Davidson

by
September 2001, no. 234

The Picador Book of Journeys edited by Robyn Davidson

Picador, $21 pb, 477 pp

The Picador Book of Journeys edited by Robyn Davidson

by
September 2001, no. 234

Aged twenty-two, I set out for Mexico, with, like Rousseau in Italy, a ‘heart full of young desires, alluring hopes and brilliant prospects’. I was determined to leave the confines of the sleepy metropolis that is Canberra, much as Isabella Bird, though infinitely more adventurous and literate, desired to escape her cloistered Victorian world. This ‘inner compulsion’, as Robyn Davidson describes it in her introduction to The Picador Book of Journeys (something her own books attest to powerfully), is a factor which gives travelogues ‘the power to reconnect us with the essential’. And if, by essential, one means illuminating the human condition in the way that any literature worth the name achieves, Davidson’s anthology gives us a sizeable sample.

There is little here that is contemporary, which is not surprising, given that Davidson laments that much travel writing today merely ‘accommodate[s] a longing for the exotic in an increasingly homogenised, commercialised and trivialised world’. This is a nostalgic view, but it is none the less often true (with some honourable exceptions: Neal Acherson, Redmond O’Hanlon, Peter Robb, to name just a few). This anthology is distinctive precisely because Davidson brings to our attention much exceptional, quirky, fascinating writing that one would not necessarily classify under the already elastic boundaries of the genre.

Nicola Walker reviews 'The Picador Book of Journeys' edited by Robyn Davidson

The Picador Book of Journeys

edited by Robyn Davidson

Picador, $21 pb, 477 pp

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