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When the Going Was Good (1946)

por Evelyn Waugh

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551943,616 (3.82)31
Between 1929 and 1935 Evelyn Waugh travelled widely and wrote four books about his experiences. In this collection he writes, with his customary wit and perception, about a cruise around the Mediterranean; a train trip from Djibouti to Abyssinia to attend Emperor Haile Selassie's coronation in 1930; his travels in Aden, Zanzibar, Kenya and the Congo, coping with unbearable heat and plagued by mosquitoes; a journey to Guyana and Brazil; and his return to Addis Ababa in 1935 to report on the war between Abyssinia and Italy. Waugh's adventures on his travels gave him the ideas for such classic novels as Scoop and Black Mischief.… (más)
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The best of travel writing and reportage, I fully enjoyed this. Waugh was a brave and adventurous young man when he made these trips. His satiric observations are so often very funny and made more so through his elegant and understated prose. Waugh's assignment to the Ethiopian Coronation in 1930 is a classic piece. Wonderful in every way.
  ivanfranko | Jan 25, 2024 |
This collection of Waugh's travel writings is for the most part excellent, illustrating his acute eye and gift for the English language. It is of its time, but he displays more liberality of mind than was normal then, although sometimes in blunter language than we are accustomed to. The writing on Africa and cruises is perhaps better than the section on Brazil, but the whole book is well worth reading. ( )
  ponsonby | Mar 19, 2022 |
Tra il 1929 e il 1935 Waugh viaggiò moltissimo: dalle rive del Mediterraneo, all'Africa nera, dalla Guyana, in Brasile, all'Etiopia. Il viaggio per lo scrittore inglese può essere solo dimensione erratica e casuale.
Distante anni luce dalla concezione dei viaggi di massa, pianificati e prevedibili, egli si fa incantare dalle suggestioni ricavate da un giornale, o dal racconto di un amico, o ancora da un'ispirazione momentanea.
Non importa quale sia il mezzo (nave, treno, aereo) o l'albergo (infimo, lurido, lussuoso): il mondo è là davanti ai suoi occhi di viaggiatore e non di turista. Bellissimo libro, almeno per chi concepisce il “viaggio” come indimenticabile, fondamentale arricchimento dell’animo. ( )
  cometahalley | Sep 5, 2017 |
The five travel essays that make up this book are all fresh and entertaining, although the earliest was written ninety years ago. Two concern Ethiopia, snapshots of the coronation of Haile Selassie and the early days of the Italian invasion. The remaining pieces recount travels in Egypt and the Holy Land, South America, and Africa. Apart from the fact that these stories form a sort of background to several of Waugh's novels, they are most readable. Waugh was a keen observer and an elegant and witty writer. ( )
  nmele | Apr 6, 2017 |
From the inner dustjacket:

About this book

It comprises all that the author wishes to preserve of the four travel books he wrote between 1929 and 1935: Labels, Remote People, Ninety-Two Days, and Waugh in Abyssinia. “These four books,” he writes, “here in fragments reprinted, were the record of certain journeys, chosen for no better reason than I needed money at the time of their completion; they were pedestrian, day-to-day accounts of things seen and people met, interspersed with commonplace information and some rather callow comments. In cutting them to their present shape, I have sought to leave a purely personal narrative in the hope there still lingers round it some traces of vernal scent … I never aspired to be a great traveller, I was simply a young man, typical of my age; we travelled as a matter of course. I rejoice that I went when the going was good.”

It’s vintage Waugh, and it’s well-written, the author’s disclaimers aside. Some of it is excellent; it’s all very readable, and it made me brush up on my history; Waugh was of course writing for a contemporary audience, and though I was pleased to realize his references were easy to place, I was quite vague on the details.

Here are the contents:

Preface


From 1928 until 1937 I had no fixed home and no possessions which would not conveniently go on a porter’s barrow. I travelled continuously, in England and abroad… We have most of us marched and made camp since then, gone hungry and thirsty, lived where pistols are flourished and fired. At that time it seemed like an ordeal, an initiation to manhood…”

Chapter One: A Pleasure Cruise in 1929 (From Labels) – London, Paris, Monte Carlo, Naples, Catania, Haifa, Cana (Galilee), Port Said, Cairo, Malta, Crete, Constantinople, Athens, Corfu, Gibraltar, Seville.

Chapter Two: A Coronation in 1930 (From Remote Peoples) – The coronation of Ethiopian Emperor Ras Tafari at Addis Ababa.

Chapter Three: Globe-Trotting in 1930-1 (From Remote Peoples) – Zanzibar, the Congo, Aden, Kenya (Nairobi, the Rift Valley), Tanganyika, Cape Town.

Chapter Four: A Journey to Brazil in 1932 (From Ninety-two Days) – Guiana and Brazil.

Chapter Five: A War in 1935 (From Waugh in Abyssinia) – The Italian invasion of Abyssinia, from a war correspondent’s perspective. Farce versus bloodshed.

*****

If you happen across this little account in your own travels, it is worth the time to read, especially if you are already a Waugh convert. ( )
  leavesandpages | Feb 13, 2013 |
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Between 1929 and 1935 Evelyn Waugh travelled widely and wrote four books about his experiences. In this collection he writes, with his customary wit and perception, about a cruise around the Mediterranean; a train trip from Djibouti to Abyssinia to attend Emperor Haile Selassie's coronation in 1930; his travels in Aden, Zanzibar, Kenya and the Congo, coping with unbearable heat and plagued by mosquitoes; a journey to Guyana and Brazil; and his return to Addis Ababa in 1935 to report on the war between Abyssinia and Italy. Waugh's adventures on his travels gave him the ideas for such classic novels as Scoop and Black Mischief.

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