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The Coast Road: A 3,000 Mile Journey Round…
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The Coast Road: A 3,000 Mile Journey Round the Edge of England (origineel 2004; editie 2008)

door Paul Gogarty

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Winner of the 'Travel Narrative Book of the Year' in 2005 by the British Guild of Travel Writers (BGTW), The Coast Road presents an idiosyncratic and illuminating snapshot of England and what it is to be English today. In this travelogue, award-winning writer Paul Gogarty travels 3,000 miles in a motorhome, exploring intimate coastal communities and ruminating on the future of the English coast. All points of the compass are covered; after an unsettling benediction at Dover's Eastern Docks he travels to Derek Jarman's Dungeness; to rakish Brighton and Madame Rosina's Bournemouth; the mudflats and Arabian sands of the north-west, where he joins a roomful of George Formbys in Blackpool; the now infamous Morcambe Bay; Billy Butlin's Skegness; and a parachuting vicar. The journey comes full circle in the secret creeks of East Anglia. The Coast Road is a warm-hearted tribute to England's coastline written by a romantic spirit who beautifully captures both the idiosyncrasies of the nation and the euphoria of the open road.… (meer)
Lid:SeriousGrace
Titel:The Coast Road: A 3,000 Mile Journey Round the Edge of England
Auteurs:Paul Gogarty
Info:Anova Books (2008), Edition: Revised, Paperback, 320 pages
Verzamelingen:Jouw bibliotheek, Aan het lezen, Gelezen, maar niet in bezit, E-Book
Waardering:
Trefwoorden:archive, art, animals, archaeology, BLTG, Brighton, boats, beach, bibliography, challenge, castles, childhood, Cornwall, carnival, Dover, dogs, England, ebook, ecology, environment, first person, fishermen, fishing, fatherhood, family, gambling, Graham Greene, historical, humor, island, indexed, lyrics, Liverpool, military, maps, museum, memory, market, nonfiction, ocean, poverty, photography, quotations, refugees, restaurants, surfing, travel, weather, William Shakespeare, accomplished

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The Coast Road: A 3,000 Mile Journey Round the Edge of England door Paul Gogarty (2004)

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Toon 2 van 2
Paul Gogarty takes a trip in a motorhome around England, missing out Wales and Scotland. In fact he didn't pick the motorhome up until Devon and so for the south-east and south coast he was staying in B&Bs and hotels, rather than camping. His style is relaxed and chatty, he clearly enjoys being by the sea and takes pleasure from talking to people he meets and re-telling their stories and we meet all sorts of characters on these pages. He particularly enjoys meeting people who make a living from the sea or did once, mostly fisherman. This is a book of its time; it is written about 10-years ago, in 2004 and so before the 2008 crash. This period where people are obsessed with house prices and taking advantage of the market to move out of London to the coast now seems like another world and the trip would be different today. However, one issue that is still with us is refugees and asylum seekers and Paul Gogarty takes a sympathetic approach to people from other countries that he meets. Paul Gogarty is a travel writer and journalist and writes well, although he does overuse the word 'luminosity'. We don't hear much about the joys of motorhoming, although he does seem to get in the swing of it and even waves at another motorhomer towards the end of the book. For a northerner it felt as if he pottered slowly along the south coast and clearly very much enjoyed his time in Cornwall and then positively trotted through the north of England missing out so many wonderful places. ( )
  CarolKub | Nov 12, 2015 |
I alway enjoy travel books, particularly those taking the pulse of the UK. And to some extent this is what was achieved here by Paul Gogarty as he travel around the coast of England. Generally this focuses on many of the towns and people around the English littoral, a journey he makes in a donated motorhome that he christens Sid. The style is lighthearted and relaxed, but at times the pace at which the journey takes place is so speedy that many places are missed out.

The joy of these types of books is when the author writes about somewhere you as the reader are familiar with. However, I was personally left disappointed with the bits he missed out. Places I know such as Rye, Filey and Whitstable never get a mention and probably weren't visited. The South West section in particular suffers from the omission of huge chunks of the north Devon and Somerset coast, and there is a big jump up to Bristol.

The other big disappointment was that this dealt with only England. Part of the premise of the book is that as an island nation, we Brits are surrounded by water and hence a coastline. As this only covers England, we get the awkward bit where he has to hot foot it up the M5 and M6 to get from Bristol to Liverpool, and similarly the need to jump across the north to get from the Solway to Berwick. Clearly including Wales and Scotland would have made for a mammoth undertaking, particularly with the prospect of the west coast of Scotland, but it would have made the book more complete.

Gogarty has written a similar book on canals, and I enjoyed this book enough to hunt that one out. ( )
  geocroc | Jan 28, 2012 |
Toon 2 van 2
...this remains an affectionate and richly sedimented haul from the threatened edges of a nation, and bears out its Proustian epigram: "The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes."
toegevoegd door geocroc | bewerkThe Telegraph, Nick Thorpe (Aug 28, 2004)
 
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To my parents - Pat and Joan Gogarty - and to my sister Lynn and brother Patrick.
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The highest temperature ever experienced in Britain was recorded the summer I drove 2,800 miles round the edge of England.
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Winner of the 'Travel Narrative Book of the Year' in 2005 by the British Guild of Travel Writers (BGTW), The Coast Road presents an idiosyncratic and illuminating snapshot of England and what it is to be English today. In this travelogue, award-winning writer Paul Gogarty travels 3,000 miles in a motorhome, exploring intimate coastal communities and ruminating on the future of the English coast. All points of the compass are covered; after an unsettling benediction at Dover's Eastern Docks he travels to Derek Jarman's Dungeness; to rakish Brighton and Madame Rosina's Bournemouth; the mudflats and Arabian sands of the north-west, where he joins a roomful of George Formbys in Blackpool; the now infamous Morcambe Bay; Billy Butlin's Skegness; and a parachuting vicar. The journey comes full circle in the secret creeks of East Anglia. The Coast Road is a warm-hearted tribute to England's coastline written by a romantic spirit who beautifully captures both the idiosyncrasies of the nation and the euphoria of the open road.

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