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- <text id=91TT1038>
- <title>
- May 13, 1991: Keeping A Weather Eye
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- May 13, 1991 Crack Kids
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 76
- Keeping a Weather Eye
- </hdr><body>
- <qt>
- <l>HUNTING MISTER HEARTBREAK</l>
- <l>By Jonathan Raban</l>
- <l>HarperCollins; 372 pages; $25</l>
- </qt>
- <p> British travel writer Jonathan Raban is at his amiable
- best when his narrative is adrift, even awash. It is easy to
- see why. Sooner or later a professional journeyer meets boring
- people in tedious circumstances. Here the land-based pilgrim
- must lie entertainingly, which is hard work, or tell the ghastly
- truth. The writer who travels by boat need only conjure a storm,
- or describe his great relief that the weather is fine. The
- reader, charmed or alarmed, follows wide-eyed. Raban weathered
- bores effectively in Coasting, a wry account of a voyage around
- England in a small sailboat, and in Old Glory, in which he
- put-putted down the Mississippi in an aluminum skiff.
- </p>
- <p> This new journal, also of a voyage to the New World ("Mr.
- Heartbreak" is J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, author in 1782
- of Letters from an American Farmer), is about two-fifths
- aqueous, which is just enough. Raban sets out from Liverpool in
- a giant container ship, discovers that the ocean is even larger--good storm action here--and then burrows for several weeks
- each in Manhattan, a small and sleepy Alabama burg called
- Guntersville and our last frontier, Seattle.
- </p>
- <p> His perceptions are easygoing and unsatirical, though in
- New York City he does notice that the middle class spends
- almost no time at street level, which is left to muggers and the
- homeless. In Guntersville he lives with a borrowed dog (as a
- people-meeting device, a good substitute for a boat), hears his
- speech patterns slowing and finds the local religiosity more
- comfortable than off-putting. Now and then he does a shrewd job
- of reporting, as when he describes tensions among Korean
- immigrant men in Seattle, trying successfully to make money and
- unsuccessfully to rule their wives and daughters.
- </p>
- <p> But journeying, not burrowing in, is Raban's job. He
- returns to it just in time, with a roguish last chapter set
- offshore in the Florida Keys. He has rented a sailboat, and the
- wind is up, and banks of low nimbus clouds are swarming in from
- the northwest. Out of sight, the Key West highway is clogged
- with tourists, but that's their problem. Raban's narrative
- scuds toward the open sea, and the beguiled reader, as always
- at such moments, makes plans: sell the house, buy a boat. A case
- of salsa and a gallon of rum. How hard can it be to write
- travel books?
- </p>
- <p> By John Skow
- </p>
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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