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Women's Fiction
Journey to Kars (Travel Library)

Journey to Kars (Travel Library)

List Price: $15.95
Your Price: $15.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Why do we travel?
Review: An entertaining read, mostly for the sections on the author's trip through Turkey in the early 1980's. It's interesting to compare his descriptions with the current conditions to see how much has changed in just 20 years. Most striking is his description of the backwater tourist status of Istanbul at that time
 
<<< Mass tourism makes no inroads into Stambul. The old town of khans and cobbled alleys is too baffling and dismaying to be sacked by tourists en masse. Ranks of coaches wait in the outer courst of the Topkapi Palace, more ranks are drawn up outside Santa Sophia: upon them are concentrated all the peddlers of souvenirs and ices, who line with their zstalls the short walk which is all a coah-pary is encouraged to take, the few hundred yards between Santa Sophia and the Blue Mosque. In the environs of one or two other mosques, and in the Grand Bazaar, you meet with paries of tourisst, but in the streets and lanes of Stambul ... I rarely met a single tourist walking alone like myself. >>>

Earlier he'd lamented the lack of cafes and other sitting places. Far different is the reality today, with a cosmopolitan atmosphere everywhere in the city, particularly in more modern areas like Taksim with its modern boutiques and fancy restaurants, or the Kumkapi area , the fishing market area with it's streets full of al fresco restaurants lighting up the night. He describes ramshackle old wooden houses, many now renovated in the Sultanahmet district to become stylish small hotels and B&Bs.
Glazebrook does an excellent job of inserting details from the many, mostly British, travelers who preceded him in the 19th century. Excerpts from their journals spark the otherwise spare descriptions, especially in the eastern Turkey sections. One has to pity the author in not being able to defeat the bureaucratic and military restrictions on visiting the medieval Armenian city of Ani, which at that time was a much more contentious border. It now forms the highlight of any trip to Kars.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Why do we travel?
Review: An entertaining read, mostly for the sections on the author's trip through Turkey in the early 1980's. It's interesting to compare his descriptions with the current conditions to see how much has changed in just 20 years. Most striking is his description of the backwater tourist status of Istanbul at that time
 
<<< Mass tourism makes no inroads into Stambul. The old town of khans and cobbled alleys is too baffling and dismaying to be sacked by tourists en masse. Ranks of coaches wait in the outer courst of the Topkapi Palace, more ranks are drawn up outside Santa Sophia: upon them are concentrated all the peddlers of souvenirs and ices, who line with their zstalls the short walk which is all a coah-pary is encouraged to take, the few hundred yards between Santa Sophia and the Blue Mosque. In the environs of one or two other mosques, and in the Grand Bazaar, you meet with paries of tourisst, but in the streets and lanes of Stambul ... I rarely met a single tourist walking alone like myself. >>>

Earlier he'd lamented the lack of cafes and other sitting places. Far different is the reality today, with a cosmopolitan atmosphere everywhere in the city, particularly in more modern areas like Taksim with its modern boutiques and fancy restaurants, or the Kumkapi area , the fishing market area with it's streets full of al fresco restaurants lighting up the night. He describes ramshackle old wooden houses, many now renovated in the Sultanahmet district to become stylish small hotels and B&Bs.
Glazebrook does an excellent job of inserting details from the many, mostly British, travelers who preceded him in the 19th century. Excerpts from their journals spark the otherwise spare descriptions, especially in the eastern Turkey sections. One has to pity the author in not being able to defeat the bureaucratic and military restrictions on visiting the medieval Armenian city of Ani, which at that time was a much more contentious border. It now forms the highlight of any trip to Kars.


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