Rating:  Summary: Good words about the sea - inadequate words for people Review: Passage to Juneau has some wonderful, intimate descriptions of the sea in the inside passage. The reader can see and feel the flow of the tide between the islands. Weaving the history of Captain Vancouver into the story brought some new facts into view. When the story dealt with the primary woman in the writer's life, the turn was so abrupt and offhand that I found myself discounting much of the story to that point. This factor is for me a fatal flaw in a potentially effective bit of creative writing.
Rating:  Summary: A personal journey within Alaska both past and present Review: Passage to Juneau is as much a journey of self-discovery as it is a travelogue. In typical Raban style, the author's keen eye and magnificent use of language immurses you in a voyage both past and present, both inward and outward. If you are a Raban fan you will not be disappointed.
Rating:  Summary: Powerful, beautiful and touching Review: Passage to Juneau is travel writing at its very best. Lyrical and soaring at one moment, darkly introspective at another, moods tracing the contours and texture of land and sea along the fantastic inner passage, this book hooks and engages the reader at every level. Raban highlights the interplay and clash of culture from the eighteenth century to the late twentienth, with an utterly unsentimental hand and eye. His rich and polished writing is a joy, and his personal involvement with his material reaches the reader's soul. Highly entertaining, richly informative, adventurous and deeply moving, this is one of the most affecting books I've read in years.
Rating:  Summary: blah blah blah Review: pedantic and self-serving, Raban blathers on and on in a way impressively formulaic and dull.
Rating:  Summary: Beautifully written, best I've read in years Review: Raban does a first-class job interweaving multiple themes into this wonderful story, including fascinating accounts of early navigation methods, unforgettable descriptions of the people along the way, reflections of the sea in native art, Captain Vancouver's amazing voyage and the harsh conflicts among his crew, and lastly, Raban's own personal discoveries, heartfelt and heartbreaking. As an eight year Alaska resident I can say it's the rare book that gives a honest, unromanticized account of Alaska portraying all its beauty, harshness, and the tragedies as well as triumphs of its people. This is the best book I've read in years, reminiscent of Bruce Chatwin and the lost art of combining travel writing with impeccable historical research.
Rating:  Summary: The Sea, The Sea Review: The travel book, while being a favourite haunt of writers, has often been ridiculed as 'an establishment in literature's red-light district '. Graham Greene, Bruce Chatwin, Paul Theroux, Peter Mattheissen and Jonathan Raban have imbued this genre with respectability. The sea is to Jonathan Raban what the railroads are to his friend Theroux and the songlines were to Chatwin. This lapsed Englishman has meandered down the muddy Mississippi, coasted around Britain and traversed the Atlantic ocean on a freighter. In going to the sea " for the going's sake " he sets sail from Seattle on a solo voyage north in a 35-foot ketch through the Inner Passage -- the water betweenVancouver Island and mainland Canada, then through the Queen Charlotte Sound to the " scribble of islands " at the southern tip of Alaska. There are three voyages here -- the physical, the intellectual and an "Inner Passage" ,of Raban's own the journey within. Replete with sumptious descriptions of the antonym of land, this part autobiography, part exploration and part essay on Kwatkuitl mythology, Raban discovers that the " rougher sea " to quote the 18th century poet William Cowper, is the one that lies within.
Rating:  Summary: Enjoyed the first half more than the second Review: This book starts off wonderfully. The author clearly has insight into the cultural and historical aspects of the Inside Passage. About midway through the book, it takes on a distinctly dissonant tone and shifts to being less about the place, it's history and culture, and more about the author and his own life's struggles. It is not particularly captivating to have anchored your boat in an isolated, almost mystical setting, only to fly out by float plane, back to ol' England for father's funeral-an admittedly important life event-and scamper back to the mystical setting to take up where you left off. I started this book feeling inspired by the cultural traditions of it's human inhabitants and the history of human exploration (eg following Vancouver's voyage), but ended up feeling simply saddened by this author's circumstance. I got the sense he was trying to finish the book quickly in order to close a difficult chapter in his life and yet still have written a book. I think, given the first half of the book, he could have done much, much better.
Rating:  Summary: If you beleive that you are drawn to books for a reason... Review: This book takes you, at its topmost level, on a journey over a magical sea and wonderful landscapes. In reality it takes you on a journey through vision and viewpoints. How do you see yourself in the world? How quickly does the "forest" close in on your life?I came away from this book wondering what hit me. And it was a great feeling.
Rating:  Summary: Book as Revenge Review: This is a great book for about the first third of its passage. I get the impression that like a musician with a few good tunes but not an entire CD worth of them, the idea of a cohesive theme is abandoned for the sake of size. A book of the parallel trips of Mr.Raban and Cap'n Vancouver was enough for me had it been researched more deeply. I got the impression that he was bored with his own topic after firing off some initial brilliant ideas. The hard right turn into the extensive description of the death of his father belonged in another book as did the wind up which feels essentially like he's using the merits of the rest of the book and his status as a writer as a weapon to dump on his wife and her decision to separate. If that's his way of dealing with the situation then it's not surprizing that the separation happened. We all have these bizarre fragmentations in our lives; the public humiliation of his wife just makes me feel worse than when I started the book and I was left with the impression that I was [pulled] into a cheap shot.
Rating:  Summary: An American Classic Review: This is a lovely,lyrical book,written with humor and intelligence. It's a treasure trove of ideas:legend,literary quotes,sea-faring tales.Never boring,Mr. Raban writes refreshingly and honestly about America - and brings the North-West alive. Everyone in Alaska and the North-West should buy this book,in order to learn more about our fascinating past!This awesomely impressive book should be at the top of every bestseller list! In addition,Raban writes respectfully about loss: the death of a much-loved father;painful marital breakdown - with heart-rending poignancy. All in all,this is a magisterial book,written by a master craftsman.We should all cherish Mr.Raban for his brilliant descriptions of the North-West. He so obviously loves this country,and does justice and credit to us all! I warmly recommend this book to all Amazon readers -it's an absolute treat!
|