Philip Marsden returns to the remote, fiercely
beautiful landscape that has exercised a powerful mythic
appeal over him since his first encounter with it over
twenty years ago. 'Ethiopia bred in me the conviction
that if there is a wider purpose to our life, it is to
understand the world, to seek out its diversity, to
celebrate its heroes and its wonders -- in short, to
witness it.' When Philip Marsden first went to Ethiopia
in 1982, it changed the direction of his life. What he
saw of its stunning antiquity, its raw Christianity, its
extremes of brutality and grace prompted his curiosity,
and made him a writer. But Ethiopia at that time was
torn apart by civil war. The north, the ancient
heartland of the country, was closed off. Twenty years
later, Marsden returned. The result is this book -- the
account of a journey deferred. Walking hundreds of miles
through a landscape of cavernous gorges, tabletop
mountains and semi-desert, Marsden encounters monks and
hermits, rebels and farmers. And he creates an
unforgettable picture of one of the most remote regions
left on earth.As in his award-winning book 'The
Spirit-Wrestlers', Marsden reminds us of the brilliant
heights that travel writing can attain, whilst
celebrating the ageless rewards of the open road and the
people for whom the mythic and the everyday are
inextricably joined. |
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