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Moods Of Future Joys, Alastair Humphreys (2007)
Eye Books 978-1903070567 paperback 250pp £7.99
A young man sets off in search of adventure and brings back an
enjoyable book

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But a tiny proportion of young men feel the need to encircle the globe
on their bicycles. Of those who do, nearly all - or so it seems - are
persuaded that their experiences will 'make a great book'. For the most
part they are wrong, alas. Brave, athletic and resourceful as they have
been on their 'life changing' ride, it is generally not an experience
that lends itself to engaging narrative.
Alastair Humphreys, happily, is one of the exceptions. Setting off,
post-university in 2001, Humphreys rode across Europe, through the middle
east and then down the length of Africa to Cape Town.
There is little by way of reporting in his book that you won't find
in, say, Mark Beaumont's
first book, or that by Bernard
Magnouloux. Nor does Humphreys have an especially lyrical turn of
phrase nor an exceptional eye for detail. He has, however, written the
book in the hope that it will be an enjoyable read, rather than an exhaustive
document of his journey - and at this he has succeeded.
His success rests on the following pillars. He was not in much of a
hurry and he spares us much of the details of his stops. He punctuates
his Odyssey with a humane and intelligent reflection on the meaning of
what he is doing. And he is happy to leave on the cutting room floor that
which detracts from his tale. (The most impressive of his acknowledgements
is thanks to 'Chris' who he edited out of the story').
Here he is struggling across Sudan.
"For two punishing weeks we dragged and pushed our bikes in 45
degree hear. The dawns and dusks were a refreshing relief from the punching
power of the dsaytime sun. Unable to wash, we were permanently grimed
with sweat and sand, and I was smiling wildly. Rivulets of sweat ran white
streipes down our dirty faces, and our clothes were crusty and ringed
with salt. It was physically gruelling, but I was in my element at last.
Teaching biology in Oxgform seemed a wonderfully long way away. This was
what I had left home for.
"At night a hot wind blew, shaking the scraps of vegetation that
hugged the small waterholes where camels roared their strangled, bubbling
cries and we slept. I lay on my back in the sand, my blistered lips cracked
into a smile. The stars looked more exotic though the mosquito net hanging
down over me from my bicycle, and for the first time on my journey I saw
the Southern Cross, my favourite constellation."
Many accounts of global circulations grind through their final third
when thoughts of ending what has become an ordeal to an end cloud out
all else. Humphyreys avoids this all together by getting only to the mid-point
of his journey in this book. The result is an upbeat and enjoyable read
that actually left me looking forward to part two.
TD Dec 11
This was the first book that I ever read on a computer (an iPad running
the Kindle app, in this case). It was an impressive and persuasive experience.
A book of which I had meant to pick up a copy for ages, was deposited
in my device on the touch of my keypad. And reading on an illuminated
screen was a delight.
My only criticisms are these. At £5.48 the Kindle book seems expensive.
I am all for authors and publishers being reasonably remunerated, but
I would expect the savings on production, distribution and retailing to
knock more off the price. I would have liked page numbers, so that I could
gauge were I was in the 'book'. And the edition that I read was depressingly
full of textural errors, particularly missing spaces after commas - perhaps
this is some technical glitch.
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