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Monday, 20 April 2009
FACTUAL REVIEW: Journey to the Edge of the World - Billy Connolly
BOOK BLURB:
In the summer of 2008 Billy Connolly set sail on a ten-week journey from ocean to ocean: from the Atlantic to the Pacific, by way of the Northwest Passage - a fabled route deep within the Arctic Circle that has thwarted explorers and fortune-hunters for centuries. For Cook, Drake and countless other adventurers, the Northwest Passage has been an alluring but impossible journey, a trial of unparallelled physical and mental strength, a haunting and fascinating wilderness. Now the Arctic is melting at a rate of 36,000 square miles a year and the journey is finally possible. For the first time, if you're quick, you can sail freely, if precariously, from Newfoundland right round to Vancouver. By plane, rail, road and boat, along coastlines and across sweeping landscapes that represent the final Northern frontier of the inhabited world for both man and beast, Billy's adventure will embrace a memorable mix of bizarre encounters, Hemingway-esque characters, incredible wildlife, forgotten languages, big game hunting and all night carousing under the midnight sun. And he's taking us with him. This is primetime ITV, to be broadcast as 4x60mins in the early spring of 2009.
REVIEW:
If you’ve followed the TV series here you get to enjoy the adventure all over again as Billy takes you on his journey through the once fabled North West passage in his own indomitable style. Whilst this is a good bit of fun I do feel that part of what essentially makes something definitively Billy Connolly was lost during this offering as his writing style was very clipped rather than his usual ramble. Whilst this is perhaps essential for the writing process and demanded in order to bring the book in on wordage it really did disappoint me as a fan. Still a good book for those who enjoy a travel tale or two and something that you’ll want to reread time and again.
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