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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

THE HIPPIE TRAIL: MORE DISCOVERIES

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Following our previous popular posts on the Hippy Trail - BIT GUIDE: OVERLAND THROUGH AFRICA and ALTERNATIVE SOCIETY 1970s: BIT Travel Guidemore material has come to light. Above is the prospectus brochure of one of the numerous independent coach companies running overland trips to India.

Intercontinental Transits, based initially in Chessington and later Goldhawk Rd, London W12, ran regular overland trips and also cheap flights to India, Katmandu, Bangkok, Singapore and Sydney. This 8pp brochure comes courtesy of Will Rogers, who made the trip back in the 1970s.

There’s a great site documenting all the various companies running bus and coach journeys to India. See: www.indiaoverland.biz/

‘The number of operators that made these journeys is endless’, they report. ‘Here is just a short list...

Aardvark Expeditions, Anglo Australian Company, Asian Greyhound, Atrek, Capricorn Overland Tours, Budget Bus, CCT, Contiki, Encounter Overland, Exodus Expeditions, Hann Overland, Hughes Overland, Indigo, Inter Trek, Magic Bus, Penn World Overland, Rotel Tours, Safaris Overland, Sherpa Expeditions, Sundowners, Tentrek Expeditions, The Overlanders, Top Deck Travel, Trans African Expeditions, King Kong, Himalayan Tiger, Tangerine Tours, The Silver Express, P.B.K., Crazy Bus, No Sweat Overland Tours & Playmates Camping

They are trying to build a database of memories and photos so if you have anything to add they would be glad to hear from you.

BHOPAL: THE TRAGEDY CONTINUES

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Source: CorpWatch

Currently editing and producing a newsletter for the  Bhopal Medical Appeal, a Brighton-based charity who raise funds for the Sambhavna Clinic.

A good way of getting up to speed on the situation is to read Mick Brown’s piece in The Telegraph and view his interview with Sathyu Sarangi, Managing Trustee of the Clinic, on the excellent Frontline Club website.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

SPANISH DELIGHTS

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This is a remarkable novel concerning a journalist seeking to discover the truth about an incident in the Spanish Civil War.

The book has three parts – the first documents the search, the second, tells the story he uncovers (which is largely based on actual historical facts). The third part takes many surprising turns. The writer is not satisfied with his story, there’s something missing. By chance he meets the real-life novelist Roberto Bolano [See Previous Posts below] who, in turn, has a story to tell,. This leads the journalist on a long, strange journey to meet a remarkable larger-than-life character who brings the story to a remarkable and profound conclusion.

Cercas is a wonderful story-teller with a light touch and a beautiful and accessible style. The book is a  history lesson about the complex nature of the Civil War combined with a thrilling and engaging investigation, full of surprising twists and turn. Its fully-realised characters and incidents excite the imagination and inspire deep philosophical reflection. The book is full of humour and deep insights and it will bring tears to your eyes and touch your heart. It was with great sadness that I came to the end of the story this morning, having lived in the book’s spell for almost a month. A truly great novel which will live in my memory.

Coincidentally, during this same period, I rediscovered a remarkable Spanish film whilst steadily re-cataloguing my substantial collection of VHS tapes [more discoveries to follow]

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Dream of Light’ (aka ‘The Quince Tree Sun’) is a documentary about the Spanish painter Antonio López García who, every year, sets out to capture the beauty of the quince tree in his garden. Its is the most amazing film about painting I have ever seen. Beautifully shot, it moves at a steady, slow, stately pace. We watch the painter make up his canvas and then, step by step, follow his meticulous preparations and the various stages leading to the realisation of his work. Other characters come and go – his wife and daughters, an artist friend (who sits and talks to Garcia while he paints) and three Polish builders who are renovating his house.

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One of  Garcia’s remarkable realist paintings, from ANTONIO LOPEZ GARCIA  - a tribute in images

This beautiful film, directed by Victor Erice (best known for ‘The Spirit of the Beehive’) is the complete antithesis to most of modern cinema. We see the world through the painter’s eyes, the camera lingering on the beauty that he perceives in the swelling golden quinces. It is a film full of small details and touching moments, which repays repeated viewings. In the frenetic modern world, it offers an oasis of calm reflection, exciting the eye and the imagination with its ravishing cinematography. A real treasure.

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ROBERTO BOLAÑO

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