Patrick Leigh Fermor (1915-2011) was an intrepid traveler and a heroic soldier who is widely considered to be one of the finest travel writers of the twentieth century. After his stormy schooldays, followed by the walk across Europe to Constantinople that begins in A Time of Gifts (1977) and continues through Between the Woods and the Water (1986) and The Broken Road (published posthumously in 2013), he lived and traveled in the Balkans and the Greek archipelago. His books Mani (1958) and Roumeli (1966) attest to his deep interest in languages and remote places. In the Second World War he joined the Irish Guards, became a liaison officer in Albania, and fought in Greece and Crete. He was awarded the DSO and OBE. Leigh Fermor lived partly in Greece--in the house he designed with his wife, Joan, in an olive grove in the Mani--and partly in Worcestershire. In 2004 he was knighted for his services to literature and to British-Greek relations.
Colin Thubron is the president of the Royal Society of Literature. Among his books are The Lost Heart of Asia, Shadow of the Silk Road, and most recently, To a Mountain in Tibet.
Artemis Cooper is the author of the biography Patrick Leigh Fermor: An Adventure as well as the editor of Words of Mercury, a collection of Leigh Fermor's writings. She has written several works of history, including Cairo in the War.
"An unforgettable book, full of strange encounters with a prewar
Balkan cast of counts, prostitutes, peasants, priests and castrati.
The greatest pleasure of all, as usual, is Leigh Fermor's own
infectious, Rabelaisian hunger for knowledge of almost every kind.
His memory seems eidetic; his eyes miss nothing. He seems to carry
within himself a whole troupe of sharp-eyed geographers, art
historians, ethnologists and multilingual poets." --Robert F.
Worth, The New York Times Book Review "Fermor's gift of observation
transcends time, fusing the classical with the modern in prose of
voluminous richness." --Robert D. Kaplan, The Wall Street Journal
"When you put down The Broken Road you feel what [Leigh Fermor]
himself felt on departing from Mount Athos...'a great deal of
regret.'" --Daniel Mendelsohn, The New York Review of Books "By any
standards, this is a major work. It confirms that Leigh Fermor was,
along with Robert Byron, the greatest travel writer of his
generation, and this final volume assures the place of the trilogy
as one of the masterpieces of the genre, indeed one of the
masterworks of postwar English non-fiction." --William Dalrymple,
The Guardian
"The descriptions of waking in unfamiliar places are so seductive
that even the most home-hugging reader will long to wake somewhere
unknown. And some of the evocations of landscapes and views will
live long in the memory." --Anthony Sattin, The Observer "In the
end, it's his moments of joy, his revelling in a young man's
moments of epiphany, which stay in the mind." --Neal Ascherson,
London Review of Books "The Broken Road is superb, towering about
the usual run of travel books....The Broken Road is better than any
gleaming capstone: while giving us a more than satisfactory idea of
Leigh Fermor's Balkan adventures, it also, in its raggedness,
accentuates the seamless magic of the books that came before, and
it wraps the whole enterprise in a pathos that humanizes his
superhuman gifts." --Ben Downing, The Times Literary Supplement "In
a lamplit frenzy of mystic dance and song, among Homeric fisherfolk
and swains, young Paddy discovers the underground ecstasies of
rebetika in all its 'quintessence of fatalism.' Glimpsed from the
future, he sets a course for the Greece that would keep his prose
dancing ever after." --The Independent "The now-complete trilogy
documenting his journey is essential curriculum for any
traveler....Fermor's youthful forays across Bulgaria and Romania to
the coast of the Black Sea make the reader wish all of life were
one long journey of slow mornings on Turkish divans, welcome
platters of raki and Turkish delight, crackling firelight and long
conversations in various languages...Even those who have never seen
the Danube will be struck with nostalgia--not for the author's
memories, but for their own, encapsulated in that same crystal mien
of idealized youth..." --Longitude "A fitting epilogue to
20th-century travel-writing and essential reading for devotees of
Sir Patrick's other works." --The Economist
"How fitting, for a man so young at heart, with such a boundless
appetite for life, that his last published words should be those of
a wide-eyed 20-year-old, embarking on what will be a lifelong love
affair with Greece. His editors, Colin Thubron and Artemis Cooper,
have put this book to bed with skill and sensitivity. Friends and
fans, acolytes, devotees and disciples can all rest easy. It was
worth the wait." --Justin Marozzi, The Spectator "The youthful joy
shines through, and the deep cultural learning that was
superimposed in later years is there in sufficient quantity to lend
wonder to this fragmented tale....Anybody who loved its two
preceding volumes will fall upon it hungrily. Anybody who has not
read the two preceding volumes should do so without delay." --The
Scotsman
Praise for Patrick Leigh Fermor: "One of the greatest travel
writers of all time"-The Sunday Times "A unique mixture of hero,
historian, traveler and writer; the last and the greatest of a
generation whose like we won't see again."-Geographical "The finest
traveling companion we could ever have . . . His head is stocked
with enough cultural lore and poetic fancy to make every league an
adventure." -Evening Standard If all Europe were laid waste
tomorrow, one might do worse than attempt to recreate it, or at
least to preserve some sense of historical splendor and variety, by
immersing oneself in the travel books of Patrick Leigh
Fermor."--Ben Downing, The Paris Review Praise for A Time of Gifts
and Between the Woods and the Water, the first two volume in the
trilogy: "This is a glorious feast, the account of a walk in 1934
from the Hook of Holland to what was then Constantinople. The
18-year-old Fermor began by sleeping in barns but, after meeting
some landowners early on, got occasional introductions to castles.
So he experienced life from both sides, and with all the senses,
absorbing everything: flora and fauna, art and architecture,
geography, clothing, music, foods, religions, languages. Writing
the book decades after the fact, in a baroque style that is always
rigorous, never flowery, he was able to inject historical depth
while still retaining the feeling of boyish enthusiasm and
boundless curiosity. This is the first of a still uncompleted
trilogy; the second volume, Between the Woods and the Water, takes
him through Hungary and Romania; together they capture better than
any books I know the remedial, intoxicating joy of travel." --
Thomas Swick, South Florida Sun-Sentinel "Recovers the innocence
and the excitement of youth, when everything was possible and the
world seemed luminescent with promise. ...Even more
magical...through Hungary, its lost province of Transylvania, and
into Romania... sampling the tail end of a languid, urbane and
anglophile way of life that would soon be swept away forever."
--Jeremy Lewis, Literary Review "A book so good you resent
finishing it." --Norman Stone "The greatest of living travel
writers...an amazingly complex and subtle evocation of a place that
is no more." -- Jan Morris "In these two volumes of extraordinary
lyrical beauty and discursive, staggering erudition, Leigh Fermor
recounted his first great excursion... They're partially about an
older author's encounter with his young self, but they're mostly an
evocation of a lost Mitteleuropa of wild horses and dark forests,
of ancient synagogues and vivacious Jewish coffeehouses, of Hussars
and Uhlans, and of high-spirited and deeply eccentric patricians
with vast libraries (such as the Transylvanian count who was a
famous entomologist specializing in Far Eastern moths and who spoke
perfect English, though with a heavy Scottish accent, thanks to his
Highland nanny). These books amply display Leigh Fermor's keen eye
and preternatural ear for languages, but what sets them apart,
besides the utterly engaging persona of their narrator, is his
historical imagination and intricate sense of historical
linkage...Few writers are as alive to the persistence of the past
(he's ever alert to the historical forces that account for the
shifts in custom, language, architecture, and costume that he
discerns), and I've read none who are so sensitive to the layers of
invasion that define the part of Europe he depicts here. The
unusual vantage point of these books lends them great poignancy,
for we and the author know what the youthful Leigh Fermor cannot:
that the war will tear the scenery and shatter the buildings he
evokes; that German and Soviet occupation will uproot the beguiling
world of those Tolstoyan nobles; and that in fact very few people
who became his friends on this marvelous and sunny journey will
survive the coming catastrophe." -- Benjamin Schwarz, The
Atlantic
"Those for whom Paddy's prose is still an undiscovered country are
to be envied for what lies ahead-hours with one of the most buoyant
and curious personalities one can find in English." -- The New York
Sun "Mr. Fermor...is a peerless companion, unbound by timetable or
convention, relentless in his high spirits and curiosity." --
Richard B. Woodward, The New York Times "We are aware at every step
that his adventure can never be duplicated: only this extraordinary
person at this pivotal time could have experienced and recorded
many of these sights. Distant lightening from events in Germany
weirdly illuminates the trail of this free spirit." -- The New York
Times "The young Fermor appears to have been as delightful a
traveling companion as the much older Fermor a raconteur." -- The
Houston Chronicle "[A Time of Gifts, Between the Woods and the
Water] are absolutely delightful volumes, both for those who want
to better understand what was lost in the violence of Europe's
20th-century divisions and for those who appreciate the beauty and
thrill of travel writing at its best." -- The Houston Chronicle
"Leigh Fermor is recognizably that figure many writers of the past
century have yearned to be, the man of action." -- The Guardian "He
was, and remains, an Englishman, with so much living to his credit
that the lives conducted by the rest of us seem barely
sentient-pinched and paltry things, laughably provincial in their
scope, and no more fruitful than sleepwalks. We fret about our
kids' S.A.T. scores, whereas this man, when he was barely more than
a kid himself, shouldered a rucksack and walked from Rotterdam to
Istanbul." -- Anthony Lane, The New Yorker "Even more
magical...through Hungary, its lost province of Transylvania, and
into Romania...sampling the tail end of a languid, urbane and
anglophile way of life that would soon be swept away forever."
--Jeremy Lewis, Literary Review
An unforgettable book, full of strange encounters with a prewar
Balkan cast of counts, prostitutes, peasants, priests and castrati.
The greatest pleasure of all, as usual, is Leigh Fermor s own
infectious, Rabelaisian hunger for knowledge of almost every kind.
His memory seems eidetic; his eyes miss nothing. He seems to carry
within himself a whole troupe of sharp-eyed geographers, art
historians, ethnologists and multilingual poets. Robert F. Worth,
"The New York Times Book Review"
Fermor s gift of observation transcends time, fusing the classical
with the modern in prose of voluminous richness. Robert D. Kaplan,
"The Wall Street Journal"
When you put down"The Broken Road"you feel what [Leigh Fermor]
himself felt on departing from Mount Athos a great deal of regret.
Daniel Mendelsohn, "The New York Review of Books"
"By any standards, this is a major work. It confirms that Leigh
Fermor was, along with Robert Byron, the greatest travel writer of
his generation, and this final volume assures the place of the
trilogy as one of the masterpieces of the genre, indeed one of the
masterworks of postwar English non-fiction." William Dalrymple,
"The Guardian
"
The descriptions of waking in unfamiliar places are so seductive
that even the most home-hugging reader will long to wake somewhere
unknown. And some of the evocations of landscapes and views will
live long in the memory. Anthony Sattin, "The Observer"
In the end, it s his moments of joy, his revelling in a young man s
moments of epiphany, which stay in the mind. Neal Ascherson, "
London Review of Books"
""The Broken Road" is superb, towering about the usual run of
travel books...."The Broken Road" is better than any gleaming
capstone: while giving us a more than satisfactory idea of Leigh
Fermor's Balkan adventures, it also, in its raggedness, accentuates
the seamless magic of the books that came before, and it wraps the
whole enterprise in a pathos that humanizes his superhuman gifts."
Ben Downing, "The Times Literary Supplement"
"In a lamplit frenzy of mystic dance and song, among Homeric
fisherfolk and swains, young Paddy discovers the underground
ecstasies of rebetika in all its 'quintessence of fatalism.'
Glimpsed from the future, he sets a course for the Greece that
would keep his prose dancing ever after." "The Independent"
The now-complete trilogy documenting his journey is essential
curriculum for any traveler .Fermor s youthful forays across
Bulgaria and Romania to the coast of the Black Sea make the reader
wish all of life were one long journey of slow mornings on Turkish
divans, welcome platters of raki and Turkish delight, crackling
firelight and long conversations in various languages Even those
who have never seen the Danube will be struck with nostalgia not
for the author s memories, but for their own, encapsulated in that
same crystal mien of idealized youth "Longitude" "A fitting
epilogue to 20th-century travel-writing and essential reading for
devotees of Sir Patrick s other works." "The Economist
"
"How fitting, for a man so young at heart, with such a boundless
appetite for life, that his last published words should be those of
a wide-eyed 20-year-old, embarking on what will be a lifelong love
affair with Greece. His editors, Colin Thubron and Artemis Cooper,
have put this book to bed with skill and sensitivity. Friends and
fans, acolytes, devotees and disciples can all rest easy. It was
worth the wait." Justin Marozzi, "The Spectator
""The youthful joy shines through, and the deep cultural learning
that was superimposed in later years is there in sufficient
quantity to lend wonder to this fragmented tale....Anybody who
loved its two preceding volumes will fall upon it hungrily. Anybody
who has not read the two preceding volumes should do so without
delay." "The Scotsman
"
"
"Praise for Patrick Leigh Fermor:
"One of the greatest travel writers of all time "The Sunday
Times"
A unique mixture of hero, historian, traveler and writer; the last
and the greatest of a generation whose like we won't see again.
"Geographical"
The finest traveling companion we could ever have . . . His head is
stocked with enough cultural lore and poetic fancy to make every
league an adventure. "Evening Standard"
If all Europe were laid waste tomorrow, one might do worse than
attempt to recreate it, or at least to preserve some sense of
historical splendor and variety, by immersing oneself in the travel
books of Patrick Leigh Fermor. Ben Downing, "The Paris Review"
Praise for "A Time of Gifts" and "Between the Woods and the Water,"
the first two volume in the trilogy:
"This is a glorious feast, the account of a walk in 1934 from the
Hook of Holland to what was then Constantinople. The 18-year-old
Fermor began by sleeping in barns but, after meeting some
landowners early on, got occasional introductions to castles. So he
experienced life from both sides, and with all the senses,
absorbing everything: flora and fauna, art and architecture,
geography, clothing, music, foods, religions, languages. Writing
the book decades after the fact, in a baroque style that is always
rigorous, never flowery, he was able to inject historical depth
while still retaining the feeling of boyish enthusiasm and
boundless curiosity. This is the first of a still uncompleted
trilogy; the second volume, "Between the Woods and the Water,"
takes him through Hungary and Romania; together they capture better
than any books I know the remedial, intoxicating joy of travel."
Thomas Swick, "South Florida Sun-Sentinel"
Recovers the innocence and the excitement of youth, when everything
was possible and the world seemed luminescent with promise. ...Even
more magical...through Hungary, its lost province of Transylvania,
and into Romania... sampling the tail end of a languid, urbane and
anglophile way of life that would soon be swept away forever.
Jeremy Lewis, "Literary Review"
A book so good you resent finishing it. Norman Stone
"The greatest of living travel writers an amazingly complex and
subtle evocation of a place that is no more." Jan Morris
"In these two volumes of extraordinary lyrical beauty and
discursive, staggering erudition, Leigh Fermor recounted his first
great excursion They re partially about an older author s encounter
with his young self, but they re mostly an evocation of a lost
Mitteleuropa of wild horses and dark forests, of ancient synagogues
and vivacious Jewish coffeehouses, of Hussars and Uhlans, and of
high-spirited and deeply eccentric patricians with vast libraries
(such as the Transylvanian count who was a famous entomologist
specializing in Far Eastern moths and who spoke perfect English,
though with a heavy Scottish accent, thanks to his Highland nanny).
These books amply display Leigh Fermor s keen eye and preternatural
ear for languages, but what sets them apart, besides the utterly
engaging persona of their narrator, is his historical imagination
and intricate sense of historical linkage Few writers are as alive
to the persistence of the past (he s ever alert to the historical
forces that account for the shifts in custom, language,
architecture, and costume that he discerns), and I ve read none who
are so sensitive to the layers of invasion that define the part of
Europe he depicts here. The unusual vantage point of these books
lends them great poignancy, for we and the author know what the
youthful Leigh Fermor cannot: that the war will tear the scenery
and shatter the buildings he evokes; that German and Soviet
occupation will uproot the beguiling world of those Tolstoyan
nobles; and that in fact very few people who became his friends on
this marvelous and sunny journey will survive the coming
catastrophe." Benjamin Schwarz, "The Atlantic
"
"Those for whom Paddy s prose is still an undiscovered country are
to be envied for what lies ahead-hours with one of the most buoyant
and curious personalities one can find in English." "The New York
Sun"
"Mr. Fermor is a peerless companion, unbound by timetable or
convention, relentless in his high spirits and curiosity." Richard
B. Woodward, "The New York Times"
"We are aware at every step that his adventure can never be
duplicated: only this extraordinary person at this pivotal time
could have experienced and recorded many of these sights. Distant
lightening from events in Germany weirdly illuminates the trail of
this free spirit." "The New York Times"
"The young Fermor appears to have been as delightful a traveling
companion as the much older Fermor a raconteur." "The Houston
Chronicle"
"["A Time of Gifts," "Between the Woods and the Water"] are
absolutely delightful volumes, both for those who want to better
understand what was lost in the violence of Europe s 20th-century
divisions and for those who appreciate the beauty and thrill of
travel writing at its best." "The Houston Chronicle"
"Leigh Fermor is recognizably that figure many writers of the past
century have yearned to be, the man of action." "The Guardian"
"He was, and remains, an Englishman, with so much living to his
credit that the lives conducted by the rest of us seem barely
sentient-pinched and paltry things, laughably provincial in their
scope, and no more fruitful than sleepwalks. We fret about our kids
S.A.T. scores, whereas this man, when he was barely more than a kid
himself, shouldered a rucksack and walked from Rotterdam to
Istanbul." Anthony Lane, "The New Yorker"
Even more magical...through Hungary, its lost province of
Transylvania, and into Romania...sampling the tail end of a
languid, urbane and anglophile way of life that would soon be swept
away forever. Jeremy Lewis, "Literary Review""
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