Trieste

· Faber & Faber
4.0
2 reviews
eBook
224
Pages
Eligible
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About this eBook

Jan Morris (then James) first visited Trieste as a soldier at the end of the Second World War. Since then, the city has come to represent her own life, with all its hopes, disillusionments, loves and memories. Here, her thoughts on a host of subjects - ships, cities, cats, sex, nationalism, Jewishness, civility and kindness - are inspired by the presence of Trieste, and recorded in or between the lines of this book.?
Evoking the whole of its modern history, from its explosive growth to wealth and fame under the Habsburgs, through the years of Fascist rule to the miserable years of the Cold War, when rivalries among the great powers prevented its creation as a free city under United Nations auspices, Trieste and the Meaning of Nowhere is neither a history nor a travel book; like the place, it is one of a kind.
Jan Morris's collection of travel writing and reportage spans over five decades and includes such titles as Venice, Coronation Everest, Hong Kong, Spain, Manhattan '45, A Writer's World and the Pax Britannica Trilogy. Hav, her novel, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Arthur C. Clarke Award.

Ratings and reviews

4.0
2 reviews
Simon M
16 June 2015
This beautiful, lyrical travelogue about an underappreciated and fascinating place was my steadfast guide to the city, as well as my poetic pleasure. Jan Morris's prose is an object lesson in both economy and decoration, managing to be direct and informative whilst always elegant and often mellifluous. The book paints an honest portrait of a mixed-up place, and it never glorifies it. What lies here is a book telling you why Trieste is interesting, and weird, not simply boasting of its brilliance. Do not visit Trieste, or indeed read this book, in search of transcendent paradise: Instead expect and enjoy an engaging, beautiful oddness, that Morris herself calls 'The Trieste Effect'.
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About the author

Jan Morris was born in 1926 of a Welsh father and an English mother, and when she is not travelling she lives with her partner Elizabeth Morris in the top left-hand corner of Wales, between the mountains and the sea. Her books include Coronation Everest, Venice, The Pax Britannica Trilogy ( Heaven's Command, Pax Britannica, and Farewell the Trumpets), and Conundrum. She is also the author of six books about cities and countries, two autobiographical books, several volumes of collected travel essays and, more recently, the unclassifiable Trieste and the Meaning of Nowhere. A Writer's World, a collection of her travel writing and reportage from over five decades, was published in 2003. Hav, her novel, was published in a new and expanded form in 2006 and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Arthur C. Clarke Award. Her most recent book, Contact!, about the people she encountered on her many travels, was published in 2009.

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