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The Amber Trail, Natasha Scott-Stokes (1993)
Weidenfield and Nicholson 0 297 81306 4 Octo 199 pp £17.99
A ride from Gdansk to Thessaloniki in 1992, initially intended
to recreate the ancient route on which amber was transported, but
better for its descriptions of some of eastern Europe shortly after
the fall of the Berlin wall

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A major tour organised around a historical quest is a promising idea.
It provides the potential for a narrative in which a mystery is steadily
uncovered. At this, Scott-Stokes starts encouragingly with a canter through
the history of amber, assembled from secondary sources. It was a story
of which I knew nothing, which made the exploration seem doubly worthwhile.
Sadly, though, the 'trail' goes cold on our traveller pretty quickly
- a fact about which she is upfront in the book. Thereafter, her interest
shifts to a search for 'a new European sentiment', in the wake of the
collapse of the iron curtain and the end of Soviet-style communism.
At this the book does rather better. First, Scott-Stokes' journey takes
her on a route that would have been nearly impossible a few years earlier.
Poland, Czechoslavakia and Hungary did not welcome western cycle tourists
for many decades, so she is not only on largely unwheelmaked territory,
but she is also suggesting a trail that merits consideration by others,
even now the wall is 20 years down.
Along the way the author seeks out opinions, both from casual contacts
and from meetings she has set up with fellow members of PEN (the international
writers organisation). How representative any of these are is open to
question - but they quickly dispel her optimism about 'a new European
spirit' having flowered. Conversations she has in Budapest so dash her
hopes for Europe - indeed for humanity - that thereafter she takes refuge
in experiences of the moment rather then her search for a unifying spirit.
This is a book that does not deliver what it promises, and like so many
accounts of long journeys, peters out towards the end. Nonetheless, Scott-Stokes'
writing provides reason enough to seek out the book - not least as an
ispiration for a route that is still substantially untrammled.
PS June 09
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