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Driving Home: An American Journey

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Spanning two decades, this frank, witty, and provocative volume—part essay collection, part diary—charts a course through the Pacific Northwest, American history, and current events as witnessed by “one of our most gifted observers” (Newsday).For more than thirty years, Jonathan Raban has written with infectious fascination about people and places in transition or on the margins, about journeys undertaken and destinations never quite reached, and, as an Englishman transplanted in Seattle, about what it means to feel rooted in America.  Stops en route include a Missoula bar, a Tea Party convention in Nashville hosted by Sarah Palin, the Mississippi in full flood, a trip to Hawaii with his daughter, a steelhead river in the Cascades, and the hidden corners of his adopted hometown, Seattle. He deftly explores public and personal spaces, poetry and politics, geography and catastrophe, art and economy, and the shifts in various arenas that define our society. Whether the topic is Robert Lowell or Barack Obama, or how various painters, explorers, and homesteaders have engaged with our mythical and actual landscape, he has an outsider’s eye for the absurd, and his tone is intimate, never nostalgic, and always fresh.Driving Home is irresistibly insightful about America’s character, contradictions, and idiosyncrasies.

513 pages, Kindle Edition

First published February 7, 2010

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About the author

Jonathan Raban

56 books190 followers
British travel writer, critic and novelist

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan...

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 41 reviews
Profile Image for Veronica.
850 reviews128 followers
October 27, 2011
I have always thought that Jonathan Raban was incapable of writing a dull sentence. His beautifully crafted prose kept me spellbound right through from Old Glory in 1981 to Passage to Juneau in 1999. It took him years to write each one, but they were precious treasure chests of words, well worth waiting for.

Then something happened, perhaps not unconnected with a marriage break-up. Silence fell. Then he published two competent but uninspiring novels about his new home, Seattle, 3 years apart (Waxwings in 2003 and Surveillance in 2006). Other than that he appeared to be potboiling away, surviving on book reviews and journalism. I missed him. So, spotting that this book had been published unnoticed by me in 2010, I snapped up a second-hand copy. It turns out to be a collection of occasional pieces similar in concept to his earlier collection, For Love & Money: A Writing Life 1969-1989. These pieces were written between 1991 and 2010 and are in chronological order. You can see precisely when the muse left him: 1999. The pieces written before this are as beautiful and compelling as ever. Afterwards, the writing declines into book reviews, introductions to other people's work, and odd bits of journalism most of which should have been thrown away with the day's paper -- they are not worth keeping for posterity. He seems detached from the world, no longer offering his piercing insights into other lives.

It's still well worth buying this book for the first 200 or so pages though. From one of the reviews on the back cover:
Raban writes about water in the way that Barry Lopez writes about snow or Wilfred Thesiger wrote about sand ... you can sense his natural element in his whole way of seeing.

Get him on or in water and he is unbeatable: if you need someone to report on a flood, you can't do better than send Raban, as Granta did when the Mississippi flooded in 1993. This piece is magnificent. As is the entire article about waves, which begins: ""I love to watch waves. Away from a suitable ocean, I'll happily stand by a puddle in the street on a windy day, gazing at air transferring its energy to water". Those pieces in isolation are 5-star reads.

But even if his muse has fled forever, it doesn't detract from the magnificence of books like Bad Land: An American Romance and Hunting Mister Heartbreak, or his first and greatest water book, Old Glory. So if you haven't read any of his books, start there.
Profile Image for Alex.
237 reviews14 followers
January 3, 2016
Another series of essays confusingly presented as a memoir. There were many excellent pieces in here, and many themes that got tedious to read about over 500 some pages. Raban is talented and does excellent deep dives on subjects like the Pacific Northwest, boating, and American culture, but mashed together in this opus there is not a lot of breathing room.
Profile Image for Andrew.
2,258 reviews936 followers
Read
March 18, 2024
A collection of odds and ends by a rather underrated writer, although honestly you can skip most of these. They are very, very repetitive, often addressing the same subjects in several publications (the vastness of American landscape, the urban/rural divide in the Pacific Northwest, Seattle's relationship to its hinterlands), and even the same phrasing. Although the essay about the Makah whale hunt is great.

Also... the fawning bits about the rise of Barack Obama, well, I remember my dumb teenage enthusiasm for that gentleman and my foolish belief that he would change the trajectory of American politics instead of playing the callow, center-right bottom that he wound up being. But I could never have said something as laughably ignorant as believing, as Raban apparently did, that douchebags like Lawrence Summers and Cass Sunstein could constitute a brain trust.
Profile Image for Florence Buchholz .
955 reviews24 followers
May 13, 2012
Jonathan Raban has included essays on a wide range of topics in the this volume; the Pacific Northwest, literary criticism, fly fishing, politics, sailing, homesteading, the character of life in small towns in the United States and in England, where he was born. All of them are thoughtful and original, and reflective of human foibles. I read all of them closely, mining the words for each subtle and entertaining morsel. I especially liked the theme of the wildness of mountains, forest, and sea in contrast to neighboring Seattle, a city populated by well educated young people perpetually dressed in camping gear. I have never been to the region but after reading Raban I feel like I know the place.
Profile Image for Johnny G..
806 reviews20 followers
April 22, 2023
First of all, I was saddened to read on Wikipedia that Raban recently died in January 17th, 2023. In 1999, I was queueing for tickets to see one of Peter O’Toole’s final performances at the Old Vic theater in London, and picked up a discounted paperback version of Bad Land from a local Waterstone’s. For two hours, I stood in an unmoving line, totally glued to this well-written book about rural Montana. I don’t know what drew me to Driving Home, a collection of Raban’s essays about travel and politics and the environment and, mostly, his second home of Seattle. Yes, some of the essays were great; some of them not, some of them hold up well over about 15 years, but many of them just seemed thrown together in a book just to get as many of his words together in one too-long book.
Profile Image for Larry.
1,507 reviews94 followers
October 14, 2011
English-born, Raban moved to the US in the 70s, and has lived here and written about it ever since. His essays deal with the ambiguous nature of his understanding of our culture. They are uneven, ranging from OK to wonderful, but they echo his really great books ("Badlands" and "Hunting for Mister Heartbreak," say). His writing is worth attention. (His essay on Shackelton and Robert Scott, tucked away toward the end, could merit a whole book.)
Profile Image for Tim.
Author 14 books31 followers
December 30, 2015
Although I enjoyed this book, I was glad I got it from the library rather than buying it, because more of the book than I thought reasonable consisted of a mishmash of unrelated book reviews and essays. But when on topic, I enjoyed Jonathan Raban's ruminations on his adopted home of Seattle, and on the wider Pacific Northwest.
Profile Image for Josephine Ensign.
Author 4 books50 followers
December 7, 2013
Highly uneven as a collection of somewhat linked essays. I like his earlier writing better than more recent pieces. Way too many references to 'hinterland' and 'VWs' in the Seattle area in the early 1990's.
343 reviews
January 18, 2016
I was expecting the whole book to be about an Englishman traveling in the Pacific Northwest, but it's not. In fact, most of the essays are not. The rest dealt with topics in which I had not interest. The author is an excelllent essayist; the problem with the book was in me, not him.
Profile Image for Nathan Box.
56 reviews4 followers
January 26, 2020
For my 2019 writing challenge and in preparation for the Pacific Crest Trail in 2020, I am spending the entire year reading and writing about books focused on a journey. For my 10th book, I read “Driving Home” by Jonathan Raban.

The Pacific Northwest

Reading “Driving Home,” it was impossible to not think of what originally attracted me to the Pacific Northwest. Like countless others who arrived before me and all those who followed in the well-worn path taken by us, I arrived at this collection of states hanging in the untamed left-hand corner of the United States with a mission of being closer to nature and defining life on my own terms. Raban’s book forced me to question that migration and what it means to make a place home.

What Is Seattle?

Seattle is somewhere between a major metropolitan city and a small town. This tug of war between the two often leaves locals clamoring for a sense of charm that will never be reclaimed and new arrivals constantly driving progress forward. Together, this conservative and liberal view of what this city means has given birth to the thing I most appreciate about this region; beyond its proximity to nature and the political/religious comfort I find there, I love finding myself being both a force for change and wanting the closeness of small-town life. This dynamic excites and makes me feel at home.

The Sea

Living in Seattle, it is hard not to get lost in the possibility of the sea. With Puget Sound at your doorstep and the Pacific Ocean within a short drive’s reach, one can find themselves endlessly pondering life beyond the horizon. While I prefer the comfort and speed of air travel, my mind cannot help but imagine life on the open ocean where every place seems within reach and too far to comprehend at the same time. This dissonance enthralls me almost as much as the beginning of any hiking trail.

The Left Coast

Seattle is one of those liberal strongholds. Within its walls, political truths play out in real-time. On a map of the country, we see blue pockets around major cities and rural areas saturated by red. The battle between Seattle and the rest of Washington state is this trend played out in real-time. Deeper into the suburbs, you can feel this war of wills more passionately. Here, fiscally conservative and morally liberal become a real attribute. For me, this is one more thing to love about this city. Debate abounds around every corner and, for this boy from Oklahoma, I find myself on the majority side.

Be good to each other,

Nathan
Profile Image for Lizzy.
967 reviews1 follower
March 2, 2019
Ignore the title and back cover description - they are very misleading. Sometimes you can sort of find the themes interweaving the included pieces and tie them to what the collection is supposedly about, but often times, you really can’t. It’s a mixture of editorials, critiques (and appreciation) of Seattle and WA and their culture and history and people, forwards for books about sailing and famous travels, discussions about poets and book reviews, political commentary, literary analysis, and many other topics (some of which are about being an Englishman in America, but often not).

The included pieces are so well written and engaging that even normally dull topics shine and become interesting. He’s literary but usually not pretentious, descriptive without being nostalgic, and critical without being unfair (and often presents multiple views). The writing is incredible and for such a long book of relatively dense material, it was a page turner to me. This book is definitely not for everyone, but if you give the book a chance, there’s a lot it has to offer. Even when I disagree with his opinions, he still keeps my attention and makes his perspective seem worth considering.
371 reviews2 followers
January 28, 2023
I really liked Jonathan's Raban's book HUNTING MR. HEARTBREAK. I have been to Seattle and the Northwest on several occasions so I thought that a book about his new home there would be very good. This turned out to be a book of essays that he probably published separately over the years 1990-2010. Some of them were very good and interesting and others I just found myself forcing myself to continue on just to finish the book which is very large at over 400 pages. It has been over a week since I finished it and I can't remember anything really outstanding whereas I still recall the "air people" of New York from "Mr. Heartbreak". In many ways it is dated to that time frame with chapters about the tea party and Sarah Palin. Some of his thoughts about a Brit trying to adjust to living in the United States are common to any immigrant and those parts are interesting.
Profile Image for Christina Metcalf.
Author 8 books5 followers
July 22, 2018
Raban's writing style is funny and insightful. He pulls in side stories and interesting details that exhibit his intelligence and deep knowledge on so many subjects. Many of these details have inspired me to look deeper into topics of interest.

However, I thought this was a collection of stories of a Brit in Seattle. My love for the NW drew me to this collection. I expected a bit of a travelogue and comparison of experiences between his adopted country and his home country. It turns out it's a collection of his writing after moving to Seattle. His essays include political and environmental topics and a lot less sense of place pieces than I was expecting.

If you go into it knowing this, you will probably enjoy it more. The title is misleading.
Profile Image for R.J. Gilmour.
Author 2 books26 followers
August 11, 2023
Raban's book is a collection of articles that look at his travels in his adopted home of the United States. Like other collections some of the pieces are stronger than others including the title piece, "Driving Home," which details a driving trip around his home on the northwest coast.

"Trying to understand the habitat in which we live requires an ability to read it-and not just in a loose metaphorical sense. Every inhabited landscape is a palimpsest, its original parchment nearly blackened with the cross-hatching of successive generations of authors, claiming this place as their own and imposing their designs on it, as if their temporary interpretations would stand." 22

"In our collective rural nostalgia, we like to think of the countryside as settled an places, not as the scene of perpetual conflict involving class, power, and money, but there's hardly a feature of any real landscape that doesn't stand for somebody's triumph, concession, or defeat." 24

"Still, it's always the business of the patient reader to learn to live in a language not-or quite-his own...In a tribute to I.A. Richards, he wrote that 'The main purpose of reading imaginative literature is to grasp a wide variety of experience, imagining people with codes and customs very unlike our own." 27

"In literature, painting, and movies, the beach has long figured as a dangerous edge where social rules grow lax and where the land is vulnerable to foreign ideas, as to foreign invasion. It is the scene of extravagant pleasure, tragedy, dramatic confrontation, self-knowledge, crime." 179
Profile Image for Tanaya.
103 reviews
November 26, 2019
I wanted to love this book, but it was long and unnecessarily wordy and the essays weren't connected in a cohesive manner. There was a lot of good here, but I was unable to finish I.
Profile Image for Mark Noble.
86 reviews9 followers
May 27, 2015
I discovered Jonathan Raban when I read "Old Glory: An American Voyage" shortly after I moved away from Seattle. Raban is a British writer and began as a travel specialist. "Old Glory" recounts his trip down the Mississippi, recreating the route of Huck Finn, one of his childhood heroes. In addition to the ability to capture the essence of a place, Raban also easily connects with people, draws them out and then paints lasting pictures of their personality. I also loved his ability to look at America from the unique perspective of a Brit; bound by a similar language but separated by nuance.

The next time I came across one of his books, he had moved to Seattle and had begun to write about the Northwest experience. I was a bit homesick for that wet and green part of the US that is rarely visited and little understood by most Americans. I appreciated sharing Raban’s experience as he discovered that remarkable corner of the country and wrote about places and neighborhoods I had come to love. Raban wrote with an interesting perspective, the stranger in a foreign land. I would realize only recently that it was the perspective of the expatriate that made his writing unique.

For the past sixteen years, I have lived the expatriate life, dragging my family to China, then Hong Kong and finally to our current home in Switzerland. When you live in a foreign country, you are quickly able to penetrate below the surface of the culture and see and learn amazing things that tourists will never experience. Anyone can take a tour of the Great Wall and marvel at the vistas from the top. But when you share a tea with a local colleague that you have known for four years, have met his family and can even speak some sentences to him in his own language—when such a person tells you of his early life in shadow of this wall, watching while his father is sent to a work camp to be re-educated, and of his struggle to get into a university and study his passion, engineering, the fabric of your understanding takes on subtle hues. The total of these impressions over the years develop into a rich tapestry that a mere tourist cannot imagine. But even so, no matter how long you live in a country, no matter how good your language skill becomes, no matter how many close, local friends you develop, the expat sooner or later realizes that he is and always will be a stranger in a foreign land.

Raban understands this better than any writer I know. As an expat himself, he knows the motivations for leaving your home country and the many joys it can bring. He has also experienced that gap which you may never cross as a stranger. In his latest book, "Driving Home: An American Journey", Raban often touches on this topic. This book is a compilation of his essays written over the twenty plus years he lived in the United States. Many of the articles were originally written to explain the USA to his home countrymen. About the expat experience, he says, “However you may fancy your capabilities as a chameleon, the inside of your head remains obstinately wedded to assumptions and prejudices acquired in its country of origin. Relatively small differences in vocabulary, pronunciation, etiquette and especially humor serve to daily remind the Briton in America and the American in Britain of their alien status.” He goes on to say, “The longer one stays, the more jarring are the reminders of one’s uprootedness: just when you are feeling most at home, an encounter at the supermarket checkout or an exchange at the dinner table confronts you with the bleak fact that you are a stranger here.” Having had exactly such an encounter at the supermarket checkout, I know of what he speaks!.

I found the book uneven with too many essays based in London and focused on the local British topics and on the Britons. I found myself skimming through many pieces looking for those nuggets which made the search worthwhile. I have several favorites: "Mississippi Water" is a revisit to the river he first drifted down in "Old Glory", now swollen with flood waters and escaping its banks. "The Unsettling of Seattle" is a look at how Seattle has changed from the quirky green wilderness to the hotbed of technology, populated by twenty-something millionaires moving and morphing at alarming rates, and changing the city with it. The title piece, "Driving Home", is long and rambling but worth the trouble, especially the section recounting the Lewis and Clark exploration. When Raban is on his game, he is as good as John McPhee writing about geology. Don’t give up on this book too soon; keep it on the table and go back to it when you are in the mood for a look at the US from the point of view of a foreigner who often seems to know more about us than we do of ourselves.
1,090 reviews73 followers
June 23, 2014
This collection of forty-four pieces originally appeared in various periodicals most of them comments on his experiences of living in and traveling about the states for 20 years, after emigrating from Britain. . His introduction, "Readings "gives you a sense of his mindset, a literary background, heavy on the classics.

One book he says particularly influenced him was William Empson's SEVEN TYPES OF AMBIGUITY which taught him to slow down his reading, "to read at the level of the word, the phrase, the line; to listen, savor, question, ponder, think." It's this kind of reflection, particularly questioning, that Raban brings to American culture, an outsider's view that notices the subtleties and contradictions that a native might well miss.

A few of the pieces ,while interesting, have little to do with any American "journey" and serve as filler. In top form, though, Raban is a perceptive observe, and some of his best pieces are about Seattle and the Pacific Northwest., "I'm in Heaven" talks about Seattle being in spirit in that "far west of the American imagination where all utopias belong." He mentions J. Z. Knight (the channeler of a 35,000 year old sage from Atlantis) who set up shop near Seattle, as well as Betty Eadie, a Seattle woman who described her journey to Heaven. Raban wryly notes that Seattle and the Pacific Northwest has always been a tale of the" hereafter;" it's where people go to get a new start, and with Boeing, Microsoft, Starbucks, and Amazon, there have been some "heavenly" success stories. He adds that "in the enlightened Northwest, the recycling and saving of things (water, owls, paper bags, whales, urban neighborhoods) elides imperceptibly into the salvation of the self."

But Seattle has its downside. Despite Henry James' 1906 praise of Seattle as one of the six most beautiful cities in the world, Raban notes that its natural beauty (mountain ranges on both sides, deep bay, hills, internal lakes and offshore suburban islands) also serves to break it apart so that citizen are put at arm's length from one another. 161 bridges in the city needed to connect its different parts inevitably means a sense of isolation.. Raban doesn't say it, but it could be a microcosm of the United States.

Seattle has changed as well. It grew as a seaport city where fishing, lumbering, and the Boeing aircraft industry dominated the city's economy, but with the development of high tech and service corporations, Seattle has become more like any other cosmopolitan city. Raban has the feeling that now in Seattle, "I might be anywhere." Seattle, a spotted owl indicator species for the rest of the country?

Raban ranges well beyond Seattle, and has essays on literature, fishing, small town life, both in England and America, and politics. A couple of political ones are especially perceptive. He reports on a Tea Party convention in Nashville and finds much more diversity among its members than the often too-stereotyped views that most liberals have of it. He praises Obama as being the first intellectual to occupy the White House in a long while, and that a good part of his difficulties stem from trying to act on the premise that America is estranged from its essential character. It has been engaged in dumb and unjust wars, has a skewed tax system, broken politics, but in too often Obama has been identified, not as the bearer of bad news, but the creator of the bad news.

In 2006 Raban wrote in a British Independent column on the aftermath of 9-11. "The paranoid endorsement of a unchecked carte blanche to defeat terrorists succeeded only in defeating guarantees of civil liberty, totally aside from the death and carnage of Iraq and Afghanistan. By one calculation the war cost the average American household $35,000. Guantanamo, for instance, served to alienate many of America's traditional allies. Considering that Rabn wrote this piece eight years ago, he was prescient in voicing concern about "warrantless wiretapping, detention without trial, the most secretive presidency on record, rupture between the branches of government. . ." None of these issues have gone away.

It's impossible to do justice to a collection of individual essays like this one, but it's well worth reading for a book that roughly falls into the genre of what others think of us. Outsiders often see what we are blind to. Raban is a writer with a consistently sharp eye that sees much.
Profile Image for Janice.
1,604 reviews62 followers
March 18, 2015
This collection of essays is thought-provoking, engrossing, and sometimes laugh out loud funny, covering many subjects, including travel, politics, small town life in the U.S., literary criticism, sailing, and the Pacific Northwest. Several times Raban returns to themes around the city of Seattle, to which he emigrated in 1990 from England. These pieces, and his nature depictions, were my favorites.

In one essay, written about heading back toward Washington from a trip to Montana, Raban began pondering the trip taken by Lewis and Clark, following this very same route toward the Pacific. As he tried to contemplate their journey, he made the following contrast: “It was hard, though, to keep securely in touch with the ghosts, our time scales were so far out of kilter...Four long days in the lives of Lewis and Clark had slipped past in the last twenty-five minutes. In this undignified fast-forward mode, the explorers shot up hill and down dale, jabbering in chipmunk voices, while the Dodge trundled comfortably through soft snow at a steady 15 mph."
The author's perspectives, as well as his skill with language, made this thoroughly enjoyable.
Profile Image for M.
99 reviews
March 20, 2012
I think Jonathan Raban is one of "our best authors," and I think I've read all of his books. I definitely like the nonfiction better than the novels. This collection of essays, intros, and reviews took me a while to finish, in part, I think, because they are not all thematically connected. I never got "into" it as a book -- as a whole -- and so didn't get sucked in and want to keep reading.

I would have rather seen two slimmer editions, one with musings on the land around Seattle, one with everything else (U.S. politics, Anglo-American relations, book introductions, etc.).

Obviously some of his essays are better than others. But they were all worth reading. Some of his talents:

* pinpiont the charm or squalor of a place
* attack a book or author with conviction and competence
* deconstruct a painting or a photograph
* offer his political opinion and make it sound like the only sane choice, yet still
* put himself in the shoes of those with different political opinions

Jonathan, I am still a fan.
Profile Image for Eliot Boden.
117 reviews7 followers
June 3, 2016
This was overall an excellent collection of essays that could have been much improved with more selective editing. Raban is at his best in essays that explore his relationship to his adopted home of Seattle through the lens of the ever-present conflicts between city and country, conservation and development, working-class and software-rich that define the geographical and social history of the Pacific Northwest. I felt several essays would have been more appropriate in a different volume, none more so than the second "Phillip Larkin," a retrospective of an eccentric and often vulgar twentieth-century British poet with no connection to the United States; this in a book called "Driving Home: An American Journey." The political essays about Obama, Palin, and the Tea Party, while excellent, also do not quite fit with the theme of the preceding 400 pages, and the book would have been more focused without them.
Profile Image for Jim.
436 reviews5 followers
July 14, 2017
Excellent collection from a favorite author. Jonathan Raban migrated to the Northwest at about the same time (and time of life) that I did. Originally a Britsh travel writer increasingly obsessed with the US, he brings a literate and perceptive view to every subject in this collection. Descriptions of Seattle people and culture of the '90s and 2000's are right on, with background from the art and history of the greater Northwest. And essays on American politics from 9/11, wiretapping, and Sarah Palin, to Obama's first Inauguration are spot on. His infiltration of a Tea Party convention is both scary and funny. All around good read.
55 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2016
Am I a bad reader? I couldn't finish this. OK, I'll be honest - I couldn't even finish the first essay, and it was about the part of the country where I live (the Pacific northwest).

I'm not even sure how this book got on my to-read list. It's a book of essays, and I usually dislike books of essays or short stories. I'm sure someone with more patience could glean a lot from this; the writing was good, if dull, but I like more story in my stories.
Profile Image for Sharron.
2,433 reviews
November 3, 2013
While a number of these essays did not interest me a bit, hence the 3 star rating, those about the geography and culture of Washington State and the West warranted 5 stars. Three of those essays in particular, Second Nature, Mississippi Water, and Driving Home, were incredibly good and by themselves they made reading this collection worthwhile.
Profile Image for Christopher Fox.
182 reviews3 followers
April 29, 2015
This series of essays was, for me, a patchwork affair. Some of the more travelogue oriented essays, like the extended first one, are vibrant, interesting and accessible. Those more concerned with literary criticism, less so. Raban is a craft writer with elegant turns of phrase and evocative diction.
Profile Image for JulieK.
942 reviews7 followers
January 5, 2012
A mishmash of essays previously published in venues ranging from Outside to the Financial Times to Vogue. I picked the book up for his writing about the Northwest, and skimmed or skipped much of the literary criticism and politics.
372 reviews1 follower
November 18, 2011
I thought this was an intriguing collection of essays, but it was a bit ponderous in spots. This Englishman's views of his adopted country are interesting and it helps a good deal that politically he swings firmly to the left.
Profile Image for Lynn Kearney.
1,601 reviews11 followers
December 9, 2011
This is a stunningly good book of essays on a wide variety of subjects: expatriotism, the Pacofic northwest, sailing, seascapes, Philip Larkin, and much more. His writing is wonderful and so are his observations.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 41 reviews

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