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Travels with Herodotus

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

From the master of literary reportage whose acclaimed books include "Shah of Shahs," "The Emperor," and "The Shadow of the Sun," an intimate account of his first youthful forays beyond the Iron Curtain. Just out of university in 1955, Kapuscinski told his editor that he'd like to go abroad. Dreaming no farther than Czechoslovakia, the young reporter found himself sent to India. Wide-eyed and captivated, he would discover in those days his life's work: to understand and describe the world in its remotest reaches, in all its multiplicity. From the rituals of sunrise at Persepolis to the incongruity of Louis Armstrong performing before a stone-faced crowd in Khartoum, Kapuscinski gives us the non-Western world as he first saw it, through still-virginal Western eyes. The companion on his travels: a volume of Herodotus, a gift from his first boss. Whether in China, Poland, Iran, or the Congo, it was the "father of history" and, as Kapuscinski would realize, of globalism, who helped the young correspondent to make sense of events, to find the story where it did not obviously exist. It is this great forerunner's spirit, both supremely worldly and innately Occidental, that would continue to whet Kapuscinski's ravenous appetite for discovering the broader world and that has made him our own indispensable companion on any leg of that perpetual journey.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Ryszard Kapuscinski hadn't traveled much before he took a job with the Polish newspaper THE BANNER OF TRUTH. A trip to India--with a Polish translation of Herodotus's works given to him by an editor--changed that. Nicolas Coster reads with a genuine sense of joy that creates all the excitement of a first trip. Coster captures Kapuscinski's depiction of the love of reading that often comes with seeing the world, as well as the tension between the real world and Communist teachings about it. Written from a rare Eastern Bloc perspective, Kapuscinski's book introduces listeners to the joys of reading and learning, and to journalism new and ancient. J.A.S. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine

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