The Fault Line
Traveling the Other Europe, from Finland to Ukraine
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
An award-winning writer travels the eastern front of Europe, where the push/pull between old empires and new possibilities has never been more evident. Paolo Rumiz traces the path that has twice cut Europe in two—first by the Iron Curtain and then by the artificial scaffolding of the EU—moving through vibrant cities and abandoned villages, some places still gloomy under the ghost of these imposing borders, some that have sought to erase all memory of it and jump with both feet into the West (if only the West would have them). In The Fault Line, he is a sublime and lively guide through these unfamiliar landscapes, piecing together an atlas that has been erased by modern states, delighting in the discovery of communities that were once engulfed by geopolitics then all but forgotten, until now.The farther south he goes, the more he feels he is traveling not along some abandoned Eastern frontier, but right in the middle of things: Mitteleuropa wasn’t to be found in Viennese cafés but much farther east, beyond even Budapest and Warsaw. As in Ukraine, these remain places in flux, where the political and cultural values of the East and West have stared each other down for centuries. Rumiz gives a human face not just to what the Cold War left behind but to the ancient ties of empire and ethnicity that are still at the root of modern politics in flash-point areas such as this.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this hypnotic travelogue, Italian journalist Rumiz weaves a poetic narrative about his 2008 journey along the length of the former Iron Curtain, moving vertically through eastern Europe where the European Union meets its non-member neighbors, from the Arctic Circle to the Mediterranean, and from Murmansk to Istanbul. Determined, at the age of 60, to go by foot and public transportation, travelling light and enjoying as many encounters and adventures as possible, he and his photographer companion rely the kindness of strangers as they venture far in search of the unknown Europe. There's an unlikely poetic beauty to his flowery, indulgent prose, in which every moment takes on transcendent meaning. "I get off into a stiff wind impregnated with the melancholy of a Welsh coal mine," he writes from a town in northeastern Norway. He lovingly describes his escapades and experiences, conjuring up places few tourists ever visit, exposing the dichotomy between the modernity of the EU and the time-lost ways of the old world, and illuminating a much-overlooked region of the world in a thoroughly fascinating manner. Though he's given to purple prose and overly colorful descriptions, there's no denying the allure and appeal of his European odyssey.