Something Sensational
by
Book Details
About the Book
This is a book of travel essays, but it is not about what is commonly meant today by “travel,” e.g. package tours for middle-aged, middle-class tourists who pile in and out of airconditioned buses around the world for their hour at the obligatory sights-- passive entertainment. These essays are about travel, warts and all, the “agony and the ecstasy” of a do-it-yourself process: from traffic jams in southern Italy to swiftly gliding dream trains in northern Germany and quite a bit in between. They depict a passionate quest for art, music, beauty; journeys to that realm of supreme aesthetic experience which is to be found in front of paintings by the masters and at great performances of operas in Tyrolian villages; epiphanies in dusty Italian squares or in Imperial palaces. They describe an immersion in the history, the landscape and the daily life of other countries. They also describe the “complex fate” of being an American in strange lands. They sometimes toy with the Jamesian question: where can Americans possibly, truly belong?
About the Author
William Guy (when he is not traveling) lives and writes in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He is the author of Gravity’s Revolt, a novel; Defunctive Music, a book of poems;A Traveler’s Education; Magic Casements; and Something Sensational, three books of travel essays. With William Orr he is the author of Living Hope: a Study of the New Testament Theme of Birth from Above. He has completed a translation of The Iliad. He is presently at work on The Lyndoniad, a book of interrelated poems about the year 1968, a long poem containing history (he hopes).