Showing posts with label travel guides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel guides. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 2, 2023

Traveller's History of Oxford

A Traveller's History of Oxford by Richard Tames, 298 pages

There are a number of great universities in the world - at least two in England alone - but Oxford has a mystique all its own.  A great deal of this derives, of course, from its nine centuries of accumulated history, the people who studied and taught there and the traditions they fostered or defied.  This is the focus of A Traveller's History of Oxford, an introduction to both the university and the city presented as a journey through time a well as space.

The author, Richard Tames, is a proud graduate of the other university, which gives him an outsider's objectivity.  Unfortunately, while his snarky tone is amusing for a time, it sours and becomes tiresome long before the end.  This is aggravated by inconsistencies and basic errors - claiming, for example, that the putative author of The Screwtape Letters is Satan himself instead of Uncle Screwtape, or implying that Latin was a language unknown beyond the clergy before referring to it as "universally accessible" a few pages later.  Still, for those looking for an unconventional guidebook that focuses on the development of the place rather than whatever tourist spots happen to be hot at the moment, this book may be indispensable.

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Travel as Transformation: Conquer the Limits of Culture to Discover Your Own Identity


 Travel as Transformation: Conquer the Limits of Culture to Discover Your Own Identity  by Gregory V. Diehl  162 pages
Author Gregory Diehl sent me his self-help book review approximately a year ago, maybe longer.  I admit that I was intrigued by the concept. Hubs and I don’t get to travel as much as we’d like, but retirement isn’t that far off, so I thought I’d start thinking about how different cultures could enhance our lives---maybe even cook some other foods beside what we normally eat.  Bottom line, maybe we could start experiencing how other cultures could enhance our lives.

Over the past years, I have picked up this short book, at least two dozen times. And at least a dozen times, I haven’t been able to get past page 19. I’m sure it’s the reader and not the writer, but I found the book so boring. 

I feel bad that I am giving Diehl’s work such a poor grade and comments, but I promised him that I would give him my honest opinion, and for better or worse, here it is.

 Travel as Transformation: Conquer the Limits of Culture to Discover Your Own Identity   receives 1 out of 5 stars in Julie’s world.