I had a school friend, her father in what was then the Nature Conservancy, who used to holiday annually on Scolt Head in Norfolk. Other than that, or perhaps as well as that, Norfolk may as well have had "Here be very flat dragons" written across my mental map of it for much of my life. And yet my parents met there. The way I am talking about East Anglia perhaps explains exactly why I loved this book, even before revealing that my relationship with the county in the last couple of decades owes much to the author's influence. From him came (second hand) guidance about places to go when I finally did resolve to satisfy some curiosity, from him came a novel set there, which I loved whilst it also confirmed my difficult relationship with the Fens.
There are plenty of books about journeys, especially the pootling about Britain sort and I am not sure I've ever met one of those I really didn't like. If someone told me I could never read any other sort of book I don't think I'd be heartbroken. Sometimes I like the comfort of samey. This was not samey, whilst never shouting "I'm not like the others". The journey was short, in distance and in duration, but deep. Impressionistic rather than forensic (although his companion Heath is a handy chap with the facts and figures, as well as supplier of The Dog, an additional delight) The central conceit, a journey, by, as it turns out, most forms of transport, between New York (Lincolnshire) and California (just north of Great Yarmouth) never weighs down the narrative. It makes complete sense without seeming unduly lofty of purpose. On this, Page hangs a memoir of his life, and his family's lives, much here but also his world travels (stopping just short of the place namedropping point where I might mutter "Well bully for you")
Initially I thought I would be ranting at this point about the poor production of the photos (some recent, some from the family archive. They reminded me of those unforgivably awful reproductions in quite a number of books travelling around Britain from an architect's or planner's perspective. And yet I came to feel, as I peered, that, intentionally or otherwise, that's exactly the point: the not quite visible. And his experience as being as much about absence - what didn't happen, what isn't there - is one that resonated very powerfully with me.
There are banal and there are dramatic events (if you should have an allergy to tales of beached cetaceans this is not the book for you). I'll not easily get his neutrally told but to me heartbreaking account of regular hotel weekends with his father and brother out of my head. As someone who loves to pore over OS maps, I had already been tempted to take a look at California last Summer, the holiday chalets memorably but subtly awful. And as soon as I had finished the book I was away to the excellent Geograph site to look at New York. Page walked and bicycled and paddled in his own footsteps and could inspire others to follow.