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Zen and the Art of Donkey Maintenance

por Robert Crisp

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I looked again at the folded map of Europe in my hand. Then I crossed the road to the Continental booking office and bought a ticket for Salzburg in Austria. Return? asked the clerk. Definitely not, I told him. In December 1966, the New Year looked exciting for fifty-five-year-old Robert Crisp. As a man whose youth was spent in constant adventure, leading a calm, domestic life in England had become a burden from which he needed to break free. Named by Wisden as One of the most extraordinary men ever to play Test cricket, Crisp served as a soldier in the Second World War in Greece and North Africa for which he was decorated for bravery, later becoming a writer and journalist. With his marriage over and his sons old enough to fend for themselves, Crisp decided to start a new life. With sixty pounds in his pocket, his wartime disability pension of ten pounds a month, and a plan to write about his adventures under a pseudonym, his journey began. Through twenty columns filed from abroad over years of rustic living and travel, Crisp, as Peter White, shared his experiences of hitch-hiking through Yugoslavia, settling in a beach shack in Greece where he attempted to cultivate the stubborn land, and a nearly fatal solo boat trip around Corfu. As the first year of his dream life came to a close, he found out that the stomach pain he had been suffering was not a side effect of too much Greek wine, but cancer. With a prediction of only one year to live, he set off on a trek around Crete, his only companion a donkey with plenty of personality. Robert Crisp's account of his travels, originally serialised in the Sunday Express, is an honest, funny, touching account of this charming rogue's journey through a foreign land and culture in search of inner peace and happiness.… (más)
Añadido recientemente porWhiskey3pa, beeby, atticusfinch1048
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An odd tale, written by a combat veteran of the western desert, a tanker in the 8th army. This is the story of his later life. He basically left his family with his financial resources and departed to parts unknown (to them). He settled in Greece and lived something of a hermit life along a beach in a small shack that he fixed up. He writes well and led an interesting life. He later took a donkey walk around Crete. He is a likable writer, who lived uniquely. ( )
  Whiskey3pa | Mar 29, 2020 |
Zen and the Art of Donkey Maintenance

In December 1966, with his marriage over, his sons able to look after themselves the 55 year old Robert Crisp decides it is time to change his life and have a new start. Robert Crisp had a reputation as a hero, winning the Military Cross during World War 2, a former South African test cricketer, writer and journalist. Sometimes referred to as a ladies’ man, who was a serial womaniser, but founded The Drum newspapers for the Black Majority in Apartheid South Africa and climbed Mount Kilimanjaro twice. So not a man for sitting back and relaxing allowing life to pass him by.

So at 55 Robert Crisp moves to Greece, with Sixty Pounds in his pocket plus his war pension, he planned to write about his life out there. Through his writing appearing the Sunday Express, the readers learnt about his life in Greece, his hitchhiking to what was Yugoslavia, then a communist country. Even at his age he had a near disaster when he attempted to sail around Crete.

Towards the end of his first year in Greece he had severe stomach pain and was diagnosed with cancer, so he undertook to travel around Crete, with a donkey that has a personality that ordinarily set it out but both well matched. This donkey like Crisp was stubborn which at times turns this journey around Crete in to sometimes a comedic experience at times quite touching.

This book is a collection of those travels around Crete with said donkey, in what he thought was the last year of his life; he was to live another twenty years or so. The book has been edited by his estranged son, so that too must have been hard work.

This is an unlikely positive and funny story that will do much to endear itself to the reader, that makes you want to look at Crisp and admire him for overcoming much adversity. At the same time one does get the feeling that he is rather self-centred and is only thinking of number one, especially when he did have family. Saying that this is a great read. ( )
  atticusfinch1048 | Dec 28, 2015 |
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I looked again at the folded map of Europe in my hand. Then I crossed the road to the Continental booking office and bought a ticket for Salzburg in Austria. Return? asked the clerk. Definitely not, I told him. In December 1966, the New Year looked exciting for fifty-five-year-old Robert Crisp. As a man whose youth was spent in constant adventure, leading a calm, domestic life in England had become a burden from which he needed to break free. Named by Wisden as One of the most extraordinary men ever to play Test cricket, Crisp served as a soldier in the Second World War in Greece and North Africa for which he was decorated for bravery, later becoming a writer and journalist. With his marriage over and his sons old enough to fend for themselves, Crisp decided to start a new life. With sixty pounds in his pocket, his wartime disability pension of ten pounds a month, and a plan to write about his adventures under a pseudonym, his journey began. Through twenty columns filed from abroad over years of rustic living and travel, Crisp, as Peter White, shared his experiences of hitch-hiking through Yugoslavia, settling in a beach shack in Greece where he attempted to cultivate the stubborn land, and a nearly fatal solo boat trip around Corfu. As the first year of his dream life came to a close, he found out that the stomach pain he had been suffering was not a side effect of too much Greek wine, but cancer. With a prediction of only one year to live, he set off on a trek around Crete, his only companion a donkey with plenty of personality. Robert Crisp's account of his travels, originally serialised in the Sunday Express, is an honest, funny, touching account of this charming rogue's journey through a foreign land and culture in search of inner peace and happiness.

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