HANAMOKU INTERNATIONAL:HANAMOKU United States:HANAMOKU United Kingdom:HANAMOKU Canada:HANAMOKU Japan: Start Page
[ HANAMOKU ]
HANAMOKU Goods Search
Goods Search
Goods | Web | Images | News
| Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia | YouTube - EVS : Easy Video Search |
Goods, Product Information
 

As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning

As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning
Amazon AssociatesAmazon Associates

List Price : £7.99

Amazon Price : £5.99
  • Usually dispatched within 24 hours
    Add to Shopping Basket

Amazon Marketplace : £1.25
  • Usually ships in 1-2 business days.
    Marketplace

Illustrator : Leonard Rosoman
Amazon
Product Details
Author : Laurie Lee
Format : Illustrated
Binding : Paperback
EAN : 9780140033182
Edition : New Ed
Number of Pages : 192
Product Group : Book
Publication Date : 1973-05-31
Publisher : Penguin Books Ltd
ASIN : 0140033181
Customers who bought this goods also bought.
Editorial Reviews
Review

In this second volume of autobiography, Laurie Lee leaves his Cotswolds home in 1934, first for London and then making his way across Europe to Spain to join in the Civil War. A marvellous evocation of time and place. (Kirkus UK)

In A Rose for Winter (1957) Mr. Lee brought his wife minstrelling in Spain, but this is the tale of his first, solo, passionate knowledge of the country in 1935-6. On a "fine bright morning in June," young Mr. Lee set off from rural Gloustershire with violin, exhilarated but also a bit abashed by his freedom. After tramping, laboring and loitering through parts of England, Spain seemed as good an answer as any to the question: "So where should I go?" His second morning in Vigo, Spain, was an affirmation: "...to look out on a world for which I had no words, to start at the beginning, speechless and without plan." Lee begins his year's pilgrimage from north to south, living rigorously (sometimes walking twenty miles a day) and content to play for his suppers. He served as a divertissement for clusters of spare and mainly primitive people in cities and villages - a complement to "great gold plains, the arid and mystical distances." Travelling with a timeless receptivity to stark beauty and muted pain, Lee reaches the end of his journey during the beginnings of civil upheaval. At the last he is picked up by a British ship, as a farewell chorus of villagers sees him off. The time is now for reader as well as author. A splendid journey, lush and lovely, and not since Keats' St. Agnes Eve buffet have the pleasures of the senses received so eloquent a transubstantiation. (Kirkus Reviews)
Product Description

It was 1934 and a young man walked to London from the security of the Cotswolds to make his fortune. He was to live by playing the violin and by labouring on a London building site. Then, knowing one Spanish phrase, he decided to see Spain. For a year he tramped through a country in which the signs of impending civil war were clearly visible. Thirty years later Laurie Lee captured the atmosphere of the Spain he saw with all the freshness and beauty of a young man's vision, creating a lyrical and lucid picture of the beautiful and violent country that was to involve him inextricably.
Synopsis

It was 1934 and a young man walked to London from the security of the Cotswolds to make his fortune. He was to live by playing the violin and by labouring on a London building site. Then, knowing one Spanish phrase, he decided to see Spain. For a year he tramped through a country in which the signs of impending civil war were clearly visible. Thirty years later Laurie Lee captured the atmosphere of the Spain he saw with all the freshness and beauty of a young man's vision, creating a lyrical and lucid picture of the beautiful and violent country that was to involve him inextricably.
Customer Reviews
LAURIE LEE As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning (2008-09-03)
5
Widely regarded as one of the greatest examples of travel writing ever made, 'As I walked out one midsummer morning' is a massively engaging book.At once visceral, heartfelt, honest, bursting with humanity and in some part disturbing, this account of a young man's walk through the Spain of the 1930s is a vicarious experience that transports the reader into an unforgettable but lost world.There are occasions when Lee seems to have arrived at truly momentous turning points. After crossing the Guadarrama peaks he first sees Madrid in the plain of La Mancha and his knowledge of Spain is to become transformed by his experience of the capital. And then later, when he meets a Spanish sailor who portentiously warns "I don't know who you are, but if you want to see blood, stick around -you're going to see plenty."Lee's politics are not overtly expressed, but his love of the people and their way of life is clear. Written later and first published in 1969, a lesser writer would have a built in nostalgia for a lost ideal, but not so here. His record of the Spanish rural way of life is far from idealistic.This is a book that I would recommend to all readers, young and old alike, and is one of the best books that I have ever read.
A forgotten style (2008-07-24)
5
A style of writing that we dont see much these days. So much description that you almost feel heady. The warmth of the sun and the total atmosphere of old Spain were almost tangible.A very relaxed writing by a young man with a zest for life and discovery.Also a great book for anyone studying the Spanish civil war and the mood of the country beforehand,not from the politician's and historian's point of view,but an ordinary person's.One of those books I would read again just for the descriptive narrative.
'As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning' (2008-05-15)
5
I first read this book in 1970 and just like one reviewer said,'Beware though as this book may make you want to give it all up and set off with your knapsack', well I did just that. In 1973/74 I travelled through 'Laurie Lee's Spain and it was just as I imagined it would be. This book for me evoked the essence of Spain of that time. Lee is an excellent writer, not only of novels but of poetry. I have re-read it many time since and it still evokes those feelings of wanting to go and explore. I'm thankful that I did do just that.
An odd little book (2007-12-31)
1
I managed to finish reading this the second time I picked it up. It was a case of putting it to rest, or else, sometime in the future I'd feel compelled to try again - and then, maybe I'd have to start from scratch. And I haven't got the energy to do that again.While I enjoyed the honeyed recollections of 'Cider with Rosie', 'As I walked..." is by far a more difficult read. For a start it's oddly balanced. Why - I wonder - bother with the time spent travelling to and staying in London, when the pertinent focus of the book is his time spent in Spain? The end is a terrible cliff-hanger, which I suppose would encourage the interested reader to pick up the next installment 'A Moment of War'. Not me, I'm afraid. In comparison with the rosy recollections of his childhood in Slad, Lee's vision of Spain is on a par with Dante's Hell. Everywhere is in a state of physical decay and moral decline. Throughout his journey he accepts the generosity of impoverished folks across the country, but shows little gratitude or appreciation on the printed page for this quality in the Spanish people. He appears quite dispassionate about what he sees. I find the claim that he mastered a fluency in Spanish after only a short time into his year-long journey, little short of a miracle. I understand there is a controversial idea that Lee did not, in fact, do all that he said he did, which includes his alleged later involvement in fighting Fascists in the Civil War. The growing presence of the impending Civil War arrives too late in the book to save me from boredom. I personally found this book a pompous, self-satisfying bore.
Another Lee Masterpiece (2007-10-22)
5
If you enjoy descriptive writing that sucks you right into a novel then this is definitely a book to add to your list. Part bildungsroman - part historical, the novel follows the path of the young Laurie as he makes his way out into the world in search of fortune and life experience. I found the writing style timeless and the story itself fascinating and gripping. A very enjoyable read.
Look for similar items by category
Related Link

Powered by Amazon Web Services + Amazon Associates.
[ ]
INTERNATIONAL : HANAMOKU United States | HANAMOKU United Kingdom | HANAMOKU Canada | HANAMOKU Japan |
© Copyright 1996-2008, HANAMOKU. All Rights Reserved.