Cover Image: An Open Door

An Open Door

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Member Reviews

This book has a charming, if rather expansive, goal - collecting stories of personal travel as escape and homecoming. Whether it's Welsh travelers going out into the world, or the world travelling into Wales, we get to explore the meaning of coming and going and belonging from all sorts of non-traditional points of view. Being a collection, there is a great deal of variety, with some hits, some misses, and bits in between. But all of the stories try to make sense of Wales and of the other, as it was and as it exists now, and on the whole the ride was thought provoking and hopeful.

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Twelve different authors are included in this anthology of travel writings. There is a strong linkage to travel in Wales, leaving, arriving and stories about Wales yet there are stories about different parts of the world. Each author’s story evoked their love for descriptive words—they draw you into the scene; each story captivated me. While this book came about with the death of one of the greatest travel writers, Jan Morris, it also recognizes that as problems of society and the ongoing problem with climate control faces us, we need to be alert to these situations and work to achieve the ability to travel near and far. Thanks to NetGalley and Parthian Books for an ARC of this book; this is my honest review.

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An anthology of travel and place writing published in the context of the pandemic? And one that's not just all sentimentality about things from the before-time? And that's starting from, sometimes going to, Wales? These are excellent things.

A sad thing is that this anthology was prompted by the death of Jan Morris, which I hadn't heard about. I haven't read much of Morris' work but her little book focusing on Wales and her home there is absolutely captivating.

All of the authors here have a connection to Wales - some born there, some moving there. But not all of the essays are about Wales. Instead, there's Brazil and Somalia, Venice and Paris and Japan, and Sapelo Island as well. Sometimes it's because of partners from elsewhere, sometimes family who have migrated. Sometimes they offer reflections on one particular moment in a life, and sometimes reflections from a generation of experience and change. There are, of course, also essays set in Wales: like one about find green space to be calm and solitary while in a wheelchair; another about following the pilgrim way in the north on foot.

I don't know anthologies like this very well, so it's depressing although not surprising to learn that the range of authors - that they are not all male and able-bodied and white and young-but-mature - is something worth noting. It is, of course, the more enjoyable for this diversity of voices.

This was a delightful set of essays, and an example of how broad 'travel writing' can be. I hadn't come across the idea of 'place writing' before reading the introduction but it occurs to me that that is, in fact, often what I enjoy reading. There are some wonderful examples of that genre here, as well as travel. And while it did make me slightly nostalgic for travel in the before times, that reality is different now - pandemic and climate change both contributing, not to mention political climate. I probably should look out for more books like this.

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