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Review
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In Patagonia
by Bruce Chatwin
Publisher: Vintage
ISBN: 0099769514
Paperback: 272 pages
While Bruce Chatwin, who was working as a journalist for
the Sunday Times, was interviewing the then 93-year-old
architect and designer, Eileen Gray, he noticed a map of
Patagonia on her wall.
"I've always wanted to go there," he said.
"So have I," Gray replied. "Go there for me."
Chatwin immediately left for Patagonia, and when he got
there he telegrammed his employers: "Have gone to
Patagonia". What follows is an amazing trip, mostly
journeyed on foot throughout the south of South America,
and the accounts experienced there written down in
Chatwin's now-classic In Patagonia.
The book starts off with Chatwin's recollection when as
a child, he sees a piece of old animal skin in his
grandmother's house. His mother tells him it is from a
brontosaurus, but later he finds out it is actually from
the sloth-like Mylodon. This doesn't dampen his
fascination with the piece of skin and soon he becomes
even more fascinated with the person, his great-uncle
Charley, who had brought it all the way to England from
Patagonia. Zig-zagging his way across arid plains and
deserts, Chatwin tracks the history of the people and
places he comes across as well as digging up information
about his ancestor at his home in Punta Arenas.
In this book, his first, Chatwin writes with variable
consistency. Sometimes the prose feels forced and dry:
"In the Plaza de Armas a ceremony was in progress. It
was one hundred years since Don José Menéndez set foot
in Punta Arenas and a well-heeled party of his
descendants had come south to unveil his memorial. The
woman wore black dresses, pearls furs and patent shoes.
The men had the drawn look that comes of protecting an
overextended acreage."
Other times, it feels like he's riding on a passionate
train of thought and one tends to feel Chatwin was as
excited writing it as one is while reading: "Never in my
life have I wanted anything as I wanted that piece of
skin. My grandmother said I should have it one day,
perhaps. And when she died I said: 'Now I can
have the piece of brontosaurus,' but my mother said:
'Oh, that thing! I'm afraid we threw it away.'"
In Patagonia isn't just a record of a wandering writer, it's a history
book, a novel and a travel book in one. With this book,
Chatwin redefined the genre of travel writing with his
little nuggets of historical information weaved
intricately together with his search for anecdotes about
his uncle and his time. The result is a sometimes
wonderful, sometimes tiresome account. But stick with it
- you will be rewarded and delighted with Chatwin's
experiences and discoveries.
Ted Mahsun works in
a local online games publisher as a content writer. When he's not
writing content, he's either writing short stories, or writing for
his literary blog, Ted's Thoughts (http://tedmahsun.blogspot.com).
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