Selasa, 09 Juni 2020

Read Online Monsoon Postcards: Indian Ocean Journeys By David H. Mould

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Monsoon Postcards: Indian Ocean Journeys-David H. Mould

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Ebook About
In Monsoon Postcards, journalist David H. Mould, notebook in hand, traverses the Indian Ocean—from Madagascar through India and Bangladesh to Indonesia. It’s an unpredictable journey on battered buses, bush taxis, auto-rickshaws, and crowded ferries. Mould travels from the traffic snarls of Delhi, Dhaka, and Jakarta to the rice paddies and ancestral tombs of Madagascar’s Central Highlands; from the ancient kingdom of Hyderabad to India’s so-called chicken neck—the ethnically diverse and underdeveloped northeast; and from the textile factories and rivers of Bangladesh to the beaches of Bali and the province of Aceh—ground zero for the 2004 tsunami.Along the way, in markets, shops, roadside cafes, and classrooms, he meets journalists, professors, students, aid workers, cab drivers, and other everyday residents to learn how they view their past and future. Much like its predecessor, Mould’s Postcards from Stanland,Monsoon Postcards offers witty and insightful glimpses into countries linked by history, trade, migration, religion, and a colonial legacy. It explores how they confront the challenges of climate change, urban growth, economic development, land, water and natural resources, and national and ethnic identity.

Book Monsoon Postcards: Indian Ocean Journeys Review :



This is an authoritative follow-up to David Mould’s Postcards from Stanland, an account of the author’s extensive travels around the lands that fringe the Indian Ocean. From Madagascar to India, Bangladesh and on to Indonesia, the reader feasts from a rich menu of unconventional traveller’s tales, intriguing (and occasionally depressing) accounts of foreign aid ventures under the auspices of UNESCO et al, and some very useful, succinct histories of the countries and regions he is visiting.What differentiates this book from most of the travel writing you’ll come across – but will always get in one of Mould’s works – is that you are not travelling in the company of some tourist, nor a wealthy pensioner indulging a taste for the exotic. He’s out there on assignment. He is deeply suspicious of the official line about a country’s economic or social progress. And he loves to ask the awkward questions. Despite his status as a scholar and a recipient of Fulbright scholarships, he travels the hard way, seeking out modest, authentically local restaurants and making a point of tracking down bargain priced rooms – with entertaining results: for the reader, at least.Mould travels prepared. He finds out about a place before he sets off, and seeks out a deeper knowledge when he gets there. And what he discovers helps the reader make sense of what he sees and hears. We are reminded that the British like to claim that, for all its faults, their colonial system brought India a few undoubted benefits: the railways, for example, and a well structured civil service. Mould’s epic quest for a replacement SIM card in Hyderabad (the forms he had to fill in required such details as his late father’s name, plus contact details of a whole raft of social and professional acquaintances in the city) suggests that the colonials also bequeathed an unhealthy taste of bureaucracies.Along the way, we learn a little about the author’s own history – his experiences within the British public school system, his time as a new immigrant in the USA, and the pleasure he took as a child in receiving, later sending, postcards from around the world.For me, the most difficult part of the book was the substantial passage which focussed on the birth pangs of Pakistan in 1947-8, of Bangladesh in 1971, and the bloody conflicts that ensued. In Europe we constantly remember, dutifully, solemnly,correctly, the tragedies of two world wars. We remain profoundly ignorant, in the mass, of equally ghastly events in these more remote places.Mould is an unusual travel writer, and makes demands of his readers. There are lighter, entertaining moments here, but you have to earn the right to enjoy them. You cannot come away from a book like this and not feel that you have learned a significant amount about these large, vibrant, populous, expanding - but rarely discussed – nations.
If you'd like to go to places that are really different from anything you have yet experienced but you're simply afraid--afraid of languages you don't speak, people who don't know you and who you don't know, situations and customs that may be scary or inscrutable--relax. You can go through David Mould's book, Monsoon Postcards. He'll not only take you to countries you never thought you'd visit, he'll give you the inside scoop on how he got there and why, all with a refreshing wit and honesty that may surprise you. Mould knows his stuff, and he gets a lot of good information on a page--stuff you need to know to understand the situation. Monsoon Postcards. It's a good read.

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Read Online Monsoon Postcards: Indian Ocean Journeys By David H. Mould Rating: 4.5 Diposkan Oleh: kendallmal

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