Best of
Travel

1975

A Street in Marrakech: A Personal View of Urban Women in Morocco


Elizabeth Warnock Fernea - 1975
    As a Western stranger in Marrakech, Fernea was met with suspicion and hostility. The story of the slow growth of trust and acceptance between the author and her Moroccan neighbors involves the reader in everyday activities, weddings, funerals, and women's rituals. Both the author and her friends are changed by the encounters that she describes. A Street in Marrakech is a crosscultural adventure, ethnographically sound, and written in an accessible style. Titles of related interest from Waveland Press: Azoy, Buzkashi: Game and Power in Afghanistan, Third Edition (ISBN 9781577667209); Jordan, The Making of a Modern Kingdom: Globalization and Change in Saudi Arabia (ISBN 9781577667025); and Omidian, When Bamboo Bloom (ISBN 9781577667001).

The Oblivion Seekers


Isabelle Eberhardt - 1975
    It is the inescapable chain of events that has brought me to this point, rather than I who have caused these things to happen. Her life seems haphazard, at the mercy of caprice, but her writings prove otherwise. She did not make decisions; she was impelled to take action. Her nature combined an extraordinary singlness of purpose and an equally powerful nostalgia for the unattainable.--Paul Bowles, preface.One of the strangest human documents that a woman has given the world.--Cecily Mackworth, I Came Out of FranceIsabelle Eberhardt (1877-1904) was an explorer who lived and traveled extensively throughout North Africa. She wrote of her travels in numerous books and French newspapers, including Nouvelles Alg�riennes [Algerian News] (1905), Dans l'Ombre Chaude de l'Islam [In the Hot Shade of Islam] (1906) and Les journaliers [The Day Laborers] (1922).Paul Bowles has taped and translated numerous strange legends and lively stories recounted by Mrabet: Love with a Few Hairs (novel), The Lemon (novel), The Boy Who Set Fire (stories), Harmless Poisons, Blameless Sins (stories), The Beach Caf� & Look & Move On (autobiography) and The Big Mirror (novella).

Voices From The Hills: Selected Readings Of Southern Appalachia


Robert J. Higgs - 1975
    

Boston Ways: High, By, and Folk


George F. Weston - 1975
    

ParisWalks


Alison Landes - 1975
    Sonia, Alison, and Rebecca Landes lead the reader through the maze of Paris's hidden back streets and into the tiny shops, secluded courtyards, underground cellars, and serene interiors that tourists rarely see.In this newly revised edition, readers will find completely updated walks covering the most interesting neighborhoods of central Paris, from the Place de la Bastille to the Boulevard St.-Germain, and an all new tour of the Place de la Concorde. Each walk is easily completed in a morning or afternoon and suggests shopping, dining, and cultural stops.Featuring maps, more than forty black-and-white photographs, and a select list of restaurants and hotels, Pariswalks is the essential companion to the hidden wonders of the City of Lights.

Downward Bound: A Mad Guide To Rock Climbing


Warren Harding - 1975
    In this climbing classic, Harding shares his years of experience in big wall climbing and attempts to answer the following questions: -Why do you climb? -How do you get started? -Is it dangerous? -What's this thing about climbing ethics-the controversy about bolts? -How do you sleep hanging on a sheer vertical wall? -What's the sense in all this? -And even the darkest secret of all: How do you go potty up there? This is a book that will take you back to the golden age of climbing. It is a reflection of its time and of the people who created modern climbing. At the same time, Downward Bound is, like all classics, amazingly modern. Harding deals with feats, questions and issues that we still struggle with, and if Downward Bound were written today it might not have been all that different.

Wiltshire


Nikolaus Pevsner - 1975
    Thirteenth century Salisbury cathedral is set in a spacious close, within a planned medieval town, which boasts Georgian delights such as Mompesson House. Towns and villages range from Marlborough with its sweeping High Street to the exceptional Lacock, in the shadow of its abbey's remains, remodelled as an eighteenth century Gothick fantasy. The great country houses include some of the finest in England: Palladian Wilton, with which Inigo Jones was involved, Stourhead set in its evocative classical landscape, the elegant 18th-century Bowood and the mellow Bath stone of Corsham Court.

John Muir's Longest Walk: John Earl, a Photographer, Traces His Journey to Florida; With Excerpts from John Muir's Thousand-Mile Walk to the Gul


John Earl - 1975