William Dalrymple – From the Holy Mountain: A Journey in the Shadow of Byzantium (страница 1)
A JOURNEY
IN THE SHADOW OF
BYZANTIUM
WILLIAM DALRYMPLE
Harper Press
An imprint of HarperCollins
Previously published in paperback by Flamingo 1998
Reprinted eleven times
First published in Great Britain by HarperCollins
Copyright © William Hamilton-Dalrymple 1997
The Author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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HarperCollins
Source ISBN: 9780006547747
Ebook Edition © JUNE 2012 ISBN: 9780007381326
Version: 2017-01-04
From the reviews of
HUGH MACDONALD,
‘A delightful tale … this book brings pleasure back to reading history and travel’
CHARLES GLASS,
‘William Dalrymple has effortlessly assumed the mantle of Robert Byron and Patrick Leigh Fermor …
LUCRETIA STEWART,
‘In his third book William Dalrymple has dug deep to present the case of the Middle East’s downtrodden Christians. More hard-hitting than either of his previous books,
PHILIP MARSDEN,
‘Dalrymple brings the past alive wonderfully and is a brilliant communicator. If
ALEX FORSYTH,
‘William Dalrymple has earned a rapid reputation as a brilliant young travel writer and
J.D.F. JONES,
‘Since his magnificent
‘Utterly compelling: a meaty, intriguing volume and a worthy successor to
TOM FORT,
‘A huge, breathtaking book about a colossal journey. The writing is by turns learned and lyrical … a magnificent achievement’
‘Any travel writer who is so good at his job as to be brilliant, applauded, loved and needed has to have an unusual list of qualities, and William Dalrymple has them all in aces. The most important is curiosity and the intrepidity it generates. Then there has to be the feeling that there never has been such a book as this, and never will be again. He must be enough of a scholar, and it helps if his jokes are really funny, and if he discovers something and goes to unexpected places. Dalrymple scores high on all these points. He knows more than Robert Byron, is less of a mythomane than Bruce Chatwin and not so dotty as Robert Fisk. He does not go slumming or patronise, but his ear for conversation – or can it be his talent for impersonation? – is as good as Alan Bennett’s. The book is a good, long read, like the works of Gibbon … The best and most unexpected book I have read since I forget when’
PETER LEVI,
‘Terrorists, devil-worshippers, nights spent in monastery cells … Dalrymple didn’t have to search out troubles during his intrepid, five-month trek through the Levant. His mentor and guide for the journey was John Moschos, a monk who travelled the same route in the sixth century AD and described the final flourish of Eastern Christianity. Dalrymple now bears witness to the almost-defunct Christian monasteries and sects of the Middle East, while also managing to recreate the world Moschos knew. It’s a wonderfully evocative book’
HARRY RITCHIE,
‘Because he has the interests and enthusiasms of a scholar Dalrymple, with his magnificent zest, inspires the reader. We relish the tense air of south-east Turkey, the threat of Lebanon, the menace of Upper Egypt; and so does Dalrymple, at least in the vigorous telling of it. Massacres without number, enforced migrations, local wars: the effect of these events on human beings is burned into the pages of this excellent book. Yet Dalrymple is a delightful companion for the reader: a sunny equanimity shines around him. The self-portrait which emerges from these pages shows us a Renaissance head, not swollen but large with knowledge, painted like that of the Duke of Urbino by Piero della Francesca, in profile, against a library window through which may be discerned the delectable landscape of adventure’
PHILIP GLAZEBROOK,
‘His biggest book yet: a large, scholarly, funny, meandering and passionate tome … Dalrymple’s enthusiasm is infectious, and his gentle osmotic supply of theological and historical background to Byzantine culture means that by the end any reader feels half expert’
NIGEL SPIVEY,
ADAM FORD,
‘Neither the panache of William Dalrymple, nor the allure of the places he describes – Mount Athos, Damascus, the Egyptian desert – are what makes
PHILIP MANSEL,
‘An eloquent, poignant and courageous account of a journey that pits the idealism of the past against the hatred, dispossession and denial of the present’
KAREN ARMSTRONG
‘Fascinating, compelling and deeply moving’
WILLIAM BARLOW,
‘Memorable … William Dalrymple’s raw and direct approach is something new, and despite its author’s eye for humour and irony, Dalrymple’s West Asian travelogue is harder, bleaker and expressed with an equality of spirit absent from the accounts of typical English romantics. As a result,
CHRISTOPHER WALKER,
‘An assured blend of travelogue and history … Dalrymple is a born travel writer, with a nose for adventure and a reporter’s healthy scepticism. His quirky, exhilarating mosaic will appeal to readers of all faiths’