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Paul Theroux's Fresh Air Fiend is a collection of masterful
travel writings. It touches down on five continents and floats through
most seas in between to deliver a literary adventure. Theroux demonstrates
how the travelling life and the writing life are intimately connected.
Central to a number of essays in Fresh Air Fiend is the idea of
becoming a stranger, travelling abroad to escape familiar surroundings,
and how that perspective relates to being a writer. His journeys
to remote hinterlands and crowded foreign capitals provide the necessary
perspective to "becoming a stranger" in order to discover
the self. c
Thus "Being a Stranger" is about the root causes of why
and how Theroux became an inveterate wanderer and consummate wordsmith.
"I was an outsider before I was a traveller; I was a traveller
before I was a writer; I think one led to the other." The second
essay, "Memory and Creation," offers a thoughtful reflection
on the writer's craft. Few of the other selections - there are more
than 50 - are so self-consciously analytical. They are more straightforward.
However, in spite of the keen observation, wit and insight, a certain
disquieting undertone, is very evident as in "Unspeakable Rituals
and Outlandish Beliefs," which is the title of one of the most
interesting, albeit controversial, essays in the book. In the book's
title essay, Theroux explains his need for solitary exercise, to
assuage "the loneliness of the long-distance writer."
Theroux writes of a solitary week in the Maine woods in wintertime.
He travels down the Zambezi River, and the Yangtze. He kayaks in
the Philippines and visits Hong Kong on the eve of the handover
to China. A film star provides entertaining material when spotted
emerging from "Lucky Sauna" in Kowloon. The establishment
is a 'gai dao', or 'chicken house', and if Theroux has an eye for
the seamy side, he can deal with pathos too, when he interviews
a survivor of the Christmas Island H-bomb tests: " 'Like a
big flower opening,' Ambo thought, 'the colour of clouds, with flames
inside.'" Getting off easier, at least with more humour, are
the multimillionaires whom he joins for a jaunt down the Yangtze:
"At the Wuhan Conservatory, Mr Jones asked, 'What is the name
of this instrument?' He was told it was a harp, but he wanted its
Chinese name. The musician looked at him and said loudly, 'Zhong!'"
In the trip up the Yangtze River in China, Theroux takes you on
a Heart of Darkness-esque journey into China and guides you through
the country's turbulent clash between modernisation, industrialisation,
communist beliefs and free-market sensibility, contemplating the
likely outcome of China's fight for a place in the world. The book
jumps from post-Mao China and years spent as an Africa-based Peace
Corps volunteer in the '60s to turtle watching in Hawaii and kayaking
on Cape Cod. In Africa, Theroux was a muzungu, a word for white
man, which also implies spirit or ghost figure. Elsewhere, travelling
in China and Hong Kong, he is a gweilo, which has similar connotations
in Chinese. He is the shadowy figure that has witnessed many of
the culture changing events of our times.
In Robinson Crusoe, Theroux goes to an unnamed island off the coast
of Guam, identified only by its global positioning coordinates,
where he humorously tries to turn an unspoiled utopia into a wired
world. Armed with a satellite phone, an electronic notepad, beeper
and video camera, he soon finds that the batteries run out within
a half hour, "it seemed pathetic that the vitality of such
sophisticated electronics depended upon such clumsy, feeble batteries....
My uplink was as useless as the doubloons that Robinson Crusoe mocks
on his island."
However, it must be said that Fresh Air Fiend can appear to some
as having a somewhat unsettling staccato quality as the author abruptly
moves from place to place, from topic to topic and, more annoyingly,
eschews any chronological order. This is not a book for people who
read cover to cover but like to pick and choose the stories in an
anthology.
Among the essays are introductions to the work of kindred spirits,
Joseph Conrad, V.S. Pritchett, Henry Thoreau and Graham Greene.
This section of the book is all too brief but intriguing as he takes
on such writers as Daniel Defoe, William Simpson, and Bruce Chatwin,
all of whom shared his fascination with other peoples and other
places. His essay on his friend and fellow travel-writer, Bruce
Chatwin, offended Chatwin fans, until corroborated by a recent biography.
His book, Riding the Iron Rooster, was judged by some to be too
harsh on China, until TianAnmen Square. His memoir, Sir Vidia's
Shadow, seen by some as a friendship-nuking book on V.S.Naipaul,
continues to stir controversy .
[A companion volume to Fresh Air Fiend is Theroux' Sunrise with
Sea Monsters].
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