Surviving with the Bare Essentials - Books

As with my music page, below I hope to provide a range of books which you will find enjoyable whether traveling or not. Once again it’s not a list of my favourite books of all time. I’ve pretty much left out all the spy classics of the belle époque by the likes of John Buchan, Erskine Childers, G.K. Chesterton and Joseph Conrad, which I like. Rather it is a selection of literature that I read in 1999, which I found both stimulating and entertaining. The only trouble with books (apart from the fact that there’s a lot of crap authors out there) is that they’re not light and when backpacking, the sum of paper has to be limited. This is especially so in my case, given the fact that I felt it necessary to purchase a motley collection of Lonely Planet guides, which I now have to fit somewhere in my increasingly jam-packed rucksack.

 

Gav’s Recommended Non-Fiction!
Gav’s Recommended Fiction!
Gav’s Recommended Road Reading List

 

Gav’s Recommended Non-Fiction!

Antony Beevor (1) - Stalingrad (494 pages) - (England) Ó 1998

Though a serious work of non-fiction, Antony Beevor’s gripping account of the titanic struggle for the city of Stalin has won over the hearts and minds of countless readers of fiction the world over. Combining in depth historical research with the writing technique of a best-selling novelist, Beevor manages to skillfully retell the saga of this six-month battle from the perspective of the highest generals, to that of the frontline troops and of the civilians of the beleaguered city. He does not fall into the trap of propaganda or partisanship, but manages to effectively describe the living hell that this conflict was, both for the Russian and the German protagonists. Beevor portrays the compelling tale of this colossal confrontation between the Soviet Union and the Third Reich with truth and a scholarship devoid of myth and embellishment. His account of the battle of Stalingrad is a story as epic as the finest works of Homer or Tolstoy.

Norman Cantor (2) - The Sacred Chain – A History of the Jews (480 pages) - (USA) Ó 1994

"What is hateful to you, do not do unto your neighbour: that is the whole Torah; the rest is commentary."

There is no more comprehensive, clear and up to date history of the Jewish people available in the English language than this remarkable work by Norman Cantor, Professor of History, Sociology and Comparative Literature at New York University. "The Sacred Chain" focuses on the plight of the Jewish people, their religion, their social habits and their relationship with their gentile neighbours throughout the millennia, from exile in Babylon to émigrés in Brooklyn. Beginning with the stories of the Torah (the Christian Old Testament), this hardback passes through their struggle against the Romans, the destruction of the Temple and the Diaspora, the rise of Christianity and Islam, the golden age of the Sepharad Jews in Muslim Spain and the gradual decline of the Ashkenaz Jews in Western Europe, all the way to the horrors of the Shoah (Nazi holocaust), the creation of the state of Israel and the new possibilities of peace between Jew and Arab. This work not only provides the key to better understanding the children of Abraham, but also the followers of Jesus and Mohammed, and the dept both Christianity and Islam owe to Judaism. For anyone trying to get to grips with the three great global monotheistic religions and the history of not only the Middle East, but also that of the Mediterranean and Europe as a whole, "The Sacred Chain" is to be highly recommended. If greater knowledge truly leads to greater understanding and mutual respect, then this book should be obligatory reading, lest we ever forget the lessons of Auschwitz.

Matthew Colin (3) - Altered State (314 pages) - (England) Ó 1997

"Altered State" tells "the story of ecstasy culture and acid house". It explains how the drug, MDMA, changed from being solely the preserve of left-wing intellectuals in the USA to the cornerstone of an illegal multi-million pound industry all over the world. The book also chronicles the rise of house and techno music from their beginnings in the all-night black gay disco haunts of Chicago and Detroit of the late ‘70s, via Ibiza in mid-1987 (the second "summer of love"), to the heart of British and European clubland. The illegal rave events in Britain in the late ‘80s and the creation of an urban drug culture in the ‘90s all stemmed from this combination of chemistry and up-tempo dance music. If you want to relive your formative years or merely to begin to understand European, and especially British, youth culture of the last decade, then this paperback is a must. It doesn’t over-dramatise or pontificate. It merely states the facts. "Altered State" does not glorify drug use. Nor does it condemn it out of hand. What it does do, is successfully manage to explain how and why ecstasy, house music and all their subsequent derivatives caught on in Thatcher’s Britain, when they had failed to do so at "home" in the US. Combining both personal experiences and extensive research, Matthew Colin, with the help of John Godfrey, have produced a book for our times. This work is to the world of investigative non-fiction, what Irvine Welsh’s "Trainspotting" was to progressive popular fiction.

Tony Hawks (4) - Round Ireland with a Fridge (248 pages) - (England) Ó 1998

"Round Ireland with a Fridge" is the funniest book I’ve read in years. From the moment I read the "about the author" paragraph at the start of the book, which stated that "Tony is unmarried and likes girls", I knew that this was going to be a humorous yarn. Hawks actually manages to out "Joseph O’Connor" Joseph O’Connor in this yarn, which is all the result of a "shabby night of booze". Spending one month hitchhiking around the coast of Ireland in the company of this everyday household appliance in an effort to win a £100 drunken bet (a zany task considering the fridge actually cost him £130), leads him on a wide range of adventures. From surfing with the fridge, to entering a bachelor festival, to getting the fridge (christened Saoirse – meaning "freedom" in Gaelic) blessed in a convent, English comedian Hawks entertains all the way in his relentless pursuit to get back to Dublin in time to win his bet and the acclaim of the Irish public. As the book says, the whole mad undertaking is "a totally purposeless idea, but a damn fine one."

Anthony Sampson (5) - Mandela – The Authorised Biography (678 pages) - (England) Ó 1999

700-page books are not designed to be easy going. But Anthony Sampson’s authorised biography of arguably the greatest man of the 20th century, is as eminently readable as a best-selling work of fiction. Mandela’s life before his incarceration in 1963 has been well documented, as has his life since his release from prison in 1990. However, the 27 years that the former President of South Africa spent in prison were often skipped over, as if they were a blip on an otherwise continuous march to majority rule. The difference with this book is that Sampson carefully outlines the importance of those hard years on Robben Island, how they moulded Mandela, the romantic revolutionary, into Mandela, the skilled global statesman. A man as heroic as Nelson Mandela deserves no less a comprehensive work of literature than what Sampson has produced here. Whatever your race or political views, this book is as essential as reading gets.

Gav’s Recommended Fiction!

Alex Garland (6) - The Beach (439 pages) - (England) Ó 1996

This is one of those books for which the word "page-turner" was invented. A cross between "Platoon" and "Lord of the Flies", I literally could not put Garland’s debut novel down. "The Beach" tells the story of Richard, an English backpacker and his French friends Étienne and the beautiful Françoise, as they trek through Thailand in search of the legendary utopian beach of the title. The adrenaline rush begins on Page 1 and continues apace through the short eminently readable chapters. It does go a bit "west" three quarters of the way through and you begin to question who actually is the hero and who the villain of the story, but on the whole, it is the perfect travel book. Read it before the Di Caprio film about it comes out, as for any movie to do this novel justice would be some feat indeed.

Robert Harris (7) - Archangel (421 pages) - (England) Ó 1998

"Death solves all problems – no man, no problem." – Joseph V. Stalin, 1918.

Robert Harris is probably my favourite author. It was his 1992 best seller "Fatherland", which got me back reading novels again after a hiatus of some time. He followed the unprecedented success of his debut, with the excellent "Enigma" in 1995, and now "Archangel" is his latest novel to be stocked on the shelves of airports around the globe. It tells the story of Fluke Kelso (Xavier March, Tom Jericho, Fluke Kelso – Harris always selects unorthodox names for his heroes), a middle aged former Oxford historian who is in Moscow, attending a conference on the newly opened Soviet archives. A chance meeting with an old NKVD (KGB) officer, who claims to have been at Stalin’s dacha, the night the notorious Soviet dictator died, leads Kelso on an adventure to the frozen White Sea port of Archangel, and to the last secret of Joseph Stalin, a secret that has remained hidden for almost 50 years.

Having studied Soviet history myself, I was extremely impressed with the historical research that Harris put into "Archangel", but given the meticulous attention to historical detail of his earlier works, this came as no great surprise to me. But Harris is no mere historian. He is also an expert thriller writer and the pages of his novels brim with suspense. His portrayal of today’s Russian society is quite frightening and I am sure that sooner or later some Hollywood scriptwriter will try (and fail) to do this novel justice on celluloid. Till then, I’ll wait for Harris’ next release with mounting anticipation.

J.D. Salinger (8) - The Catcher in the Rye (192 pages) - (USA) Ó 1945

"Don’t ever tell anybody anything. If you do, you start missing everybody."

So ends J.D. Salinger’s "The Catcher in the Rye". Well if Holden Caulfield’s words are true, that’s me f*cked for starters. This is one of the books that I had been threatening to read for years, and finally got around to devouring it in a couple of days. This is not bad going as though it’s a short novel, I am a notoriously slow reader. Without giving the plot away, it tells the story of Holden Caulfield, an apathetic American adolescent with more problems than the Middle East peace process. He’s a likeable chap and all, no really he is. It’s just that he’s pretty screwed in the head, that’s all.

Salinger manages to tell the story of his anti-hero with such apparent ease that at times you think that it is really Caulfield who is putting pen to paper, recounting the sordid details of his trip to New York before the Christmas school holidays. "Catcher in the Rye" is every much an American classic as Scott Fitzgerald’s "The Great Gatsby" or Steinbeck’s "The Pearl". Just read the goddamn book, as Holden would say, really.

Gav’s Recommended Road Reading List

Here follows a selection of 20th century novels and books, which I’ve wanted to read for some time, but just have never got around to it. I hope to bring most of them with me on my travels, though I fear my rucksack and my back might have other ideas.

Non-Fiction

(1) J. Bowyer Bell "Back to the Future - The Protestants and a United - Ireland" - (Ireland) Ó 1996 (434 pages)

(2) Robert Fisk "In Time of War: Ireland, Ulster & the Price of Neutrality" - (Ireland) Ó 1983 (653 pages)

Fiction

(3) Roddy Doyle "A Star Called Henry" - (Ireland) Ó 1999 (344 pages)

(4) Graham Greene "The Third Man" - (USA) Ó 1950 (120 pages)

(5) Joseph Heller "Catch 22" - (England) Ó 1955 (570 pages)

(6) Ernest Hemingway "For Whom The Bell Tolls" - (USA) Ó 1941 (504 pages)

(7) Aldous Huxley "Brave New World" - (England) Ó 1932 (237 pages)

(8) James Joyce "Ulysses" - (Ireland) Ó 1922 (735 pages)

(9) Jack Kerouac "On the Road" - (USA) Ó 1955 (310 pages)

(10) George Orwell "1984" - (England) Ó 1949 (326 pages)

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