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Pedals And Petticoats, Mary Elsy (2005)
Sumersdale 1 84024 439 9 Paperback 247pp
Four young women cycle through Belgium, Germany, Austria, Italy,
France and Spain in the summer of 1950 - enjoyably recounted, fifty
years later

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In this age of the apparently universal gap year, it is usual to marvel
at the audacity of a venture such as that undertaken by Mary Elsy and
her friends. And yet, it is clear from her story, that vagabonding, as
some then called it, was by no means unusual in the 1950s.
Elsy and co bump into Pete and John, another couple of youthfull wanders
at several points on their circular tour. Indeed when they get to Florence,
for the extraordinary sounding 'International Camping Rally', they even
have an unexpected encounter with Agnes' parents.
Nonetheless, it is the pretext of this book, as much as anything else
that keeps this book bowling along. It is a jolly fine thing that four
young women had the wit and the determination to see such an adventure
through. There is easily sufficient here to make pleasurable the vicarious
enjoyment of their travels.
The scrapes and moments of serendipity that they experience are pretty
much what you would expect - misunderstandings at hotels and unwanted
amorous advances. And, travelogue does not lend itself to the real development
of so many characters.
The book does, however, provide a snapshot of Europe as the dust of war
settled, and the attitudes of some young Britons to countries against
which we pitched total war for nearly six years.
It would be nice to think that it might serve as an inspiration for
young people and their parents who are considering a coming-of-age travel
experience. An unsupported circumnavigation of Europe can have a lot more
developmental value - not to say, simple pleasure - than a packaged experience
on the beaches of south-east Asia.
PS April 09
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