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In Patagonia (Vintage classics)
 
 
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In Patagonia (Vintage classics) [Paperback]

Bruce Chatwin , Nicholas Shakespeare
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Classics; New edition edition (3 Dec 1998)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0099769514
  • ISBN-13: 978-0099769514
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 1.2 x 19.9 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (23 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 16,603 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Bruce Chatwin
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

Fascinated by Patagonia ever since an early childhood lust for his Grandma's scrap of hairy Giant Sloth skin, Bruce Chatwin is intrigued by odd miners, Darwin, the Welsh and the log cabin built by Butch Cassidy. From Rio Negro to the southernmost town of Ushuaia, Chatwin depicts all in writing as spare as the Patagonian desert and as vibrant as the purple clouds off Last Hope Sound.

Review

'The book that redefined travel writing' Guardian

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Seeking some skin 5 Nov 2005
By Stephen A. Haines HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
How many children become adults fulfilling a childhood dream by visiting remote places? Bruce Chatwin, driven by memories of his grandfather's strange artifact, takes us with him to the farthest reaches of South America. His travels in that mysterious realm result in this masterfully done account of journeys in Patagonia - southern Argentina and Chile. It's not an exaggeration to praise this work as the first to supplement Darwin's. Both sought fossils, although Chatwin's pursuit is rather more specific. Both described the land, the people and events in the most captivating and readable manner. A rare treasure in travel literature, this book is a timeless treasure.

Patagonia has been a haven for many European nationalities besides the Spanish. British, Welsh, Scots and the Germans have found refuge and opportunities here. Chatwin encounters a wide spectrum of the inhabitants. By touring on foot, bus and horse, as well as obtaining the occasional lift, he is able to garner intense impressions. Lacing the account of what he observes with numerous piquant historical side notes, he imparts the place along with the spirit of the residents. The history varies as the land itself. Rising from the Atlantic across a vast plain until reaching the rising slopes of the "back" of the Andes, Patagonia offers incredible vistas and diversity. Decades of building immense rancheros and farms have been punctuated by social and political upheavals. Chatwin recounts the lives of many of the rebels and how they impacted the pampas scene. His literary capacity seems as vast as the territory. We even encounter The Ancient Mariner. There are no dull moments in this book.

Chatwin presents a more knowledgeable view in discussing aboriginal people than that of most travel writers. There's nothing patronizing in his tone as he tries to address their plight. "Tries to" because European intrusion has left so little for researchers of indigenous cultures to address. He cites the expressive terms in the Yamana language to point out how culturally inept the colonizing powers have been. We learn to use the term "primitive" with caution. Millennia of residence gained the original peoples skills the Europeans disparaged, often to
their regret. It's becoming a familiar story, made sadder at the realization the loss of cultures swept away by colonization.

At the end, his original quest brings him to a cave visited by Charley Milward, wrecked ship's captain. He cannot replace the artifact Milward left in Chatwin's grandmother's house, but there is other compensation. That the quest isn't a failure adds further lustre to an incredible journey. But what Chatwin has gained is as nothing compared to what he's given us. This book will remain a classic for years to come. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This book is not like any other travel journal I have ever read. The text does not stick rigidly to what Bruce did or what he saw, but branches off into the realms of history and culture, giving the reader so much to think about. The real beauty is that towards the end, all the various paths and routes seem to coincide to nicely tie the storyline up into one overall piece.

I would greatly recommend this book, since it is a refreshing change of style to the more modern travel experience books on the market, and so makes for very compelling reading.

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36 of 38 people found the following review helpful
By Sirin
Format:Paperback
I was browsing the shelves of the travel section of a large bookshop recently looking for inspiration. 'In Patagonia' appealed to me for three reasons. Firstly, I am planning a long trip to South America and was interested to read any writing covering that area. Secondly, I was captivated by Paul Theroux's comment on the back cover of the Vintage edition that Bruce Chatwin had found a remote place 'like the land where the Jumblies live'. I love eccentric people and places. Thirdly, I was intrigued by the pictures in the centre of the book - a corrugated iron hut on wheels, a run down station in the middle of knowhere, a set of hand prints on a cave wall and other peculiar and whimsical images relating to the places Chatwin visited on his travels and the stories he collected on the way. I had to read it.

What emerges is an extraordinary chronicle of the nomadic wanderings of Chatwin during his 6 month trip to Patagonia (he quit his job at the Sunday Times in order to embark on this visit). He begins by describing how he was curious to find out more about a curious ancient beast, of which his grandmother had a fragment of skin, but soon becomes waylaid by a bizarre succession of people and stories that build upon each other as the book progresses like a ramshackle house of cards.

It is the stories that form the essence of the book. There is description of the geography and physical characteristics of the region but only in brief passages as a setting to another inspired piece of Patagonian folklore. Chatwin clearly has an ear for a good yarn and an almost dilletante, enquiring mind. Also, in the manner of a skilled raconteur, he is frequently economical with the truth in order to include his own even better facts. Thus the book is a curious conglomerate of part travel writing, part sociology, part history, part anthropology and part fiction.

Don't read if if you want a standard travel chronicle that will tell you where to go or what do do in this part of the world, but then there are plenty of Rough Guide and Lonley Planet books for that. If you are a budding voyager with a taste for scholarship and a penchant for bizzare tales, this book is an essential part of the travellers canon.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Beware Italian version
In Patagonia is one of my favourite books, Chatwin's simultaneously sparse yet busy prose a feast for the imagination. Read more
Published 27 days ago by Wookborm
Still changing perspectives nearly forty years on
In Patagonia is the book that liberated travel writing from the Eric Newby school of 'I went there and did that and saw that' - it is a pastiche of cameo scenes and odd diversions,... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Wandering Angus
Seminal Maybe but Uninspiring
I had heard and read so many good publicity pieces about Bruce Chatwin's "In Patagonia" that when I came to read the book I had great expectations. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Herman Norford
Moderate at best
Plenty of character sketches, some of which are interesting in their way but none of which are amusing in any way and will be forgotten as soon as you move on to the next one. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Yellow Duck
To the ends of the earth...
Bruce Chatwin wrote this superlative travel narrative over 30 years ago. For travelers of the "path less taken," Patagonia carries a special allure - it is one of the few areas... Read more
Published 14 months ago by John P. Jones III
Bruce Chatwyn Revisited
When I arrived in Welsh North eastern Patagonia (Trelew) a few weeks ago, our guide said that most of his clients carried Chatwyn's book and were keen to see what remains of Welsh... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Mervyn
In Patagonia
Having spent several months travelling in Patagonia in 2008 it was nice to read Bruce Chatwin's account of his travels there several years earlier. A good read
Published 20 months ago by N. A. Latif
Patagonia
This is a great read, as literature as as well/more than travel writing. Well worth resurrecting.
Published 21 months ago by M. Dent
ANTIPODEANS EVERYWHERE
If you enjoy books such as "Travels with my Aunt" and any number of those fantasies by R.M. Ballantyne ("The Coral Island", for instance), this is one for you. Read more
Published on 8 May 2010 by Erroll F. Brosnan
Uninvolving
Having been around when this book became a big hit in the 1980s,l was intrigued when it was selected for our book club.What a disappointment it turned out to be. Read more
Published on 1 Jan 2010 by D. Glowacki
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