Travels of a Painter
Autor James Reeveen Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 dec 2020
His cousin, the historian Antonia Fraser, once remarked in a letter to him: “Dearest James, When God gave you your great artistic talent She made a big mistake, contrary to what is generally thought. This is because you are really meant to be a brilliant writer.”
And so now, badgered by Fraser and other writer friends, Reeve has at last put his talents together in a series of self-contained short stories recalling travels, anecdotes, and encounters, vividly illustrated through his colorful vignettes. Always travelling with the purpose of work, in Italy James meets Mrs. Acton, the mother of Harold Acton. He meets Princess Elizabeth of Toro in Uganda and is captured by pygmies in the Congo forest. He paints the fearsome Mrs. Gilbert Miller’s portrait in Palm Beach and travels in Rajasthan with Diana Wordsworth, a last relic of the Raj. At last, weary of wandering, he discovers a distant cloud-forest village in Mexico. There he built a house and stayed for the next thirty-five years.
Accompanied by beautiful original illustrations, Travels of a Painter is a colorful collection of short travel stories by a master of description.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781916495791
ISBN-10: 1916495796
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 100 color plates
Dimensiuni: 159 x 235 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: Unicorn Publishing Group
Colecția Unicorn Publishing Group
ISBN-10: 1916495796
Pagini: 320
Ilustrații: 100 color plates
Dimensiuni: 159 x 235 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: Unicorn Publishing Group
Colecția Unicorn Publishing Group
Notă biografică
James Reeve is a writer and painter based in Somerset, UK.
Recenzii
"Narrative artist James Reeve has never kept a diary, instead writing his long, detailed letters home from his extensive, worldwide travels. Finding these by chance in a trunk, carefully tied up with string and dated and labelled by his mother, he has used them as the basis for this part-memoir, part-travelogue and illustrated it with vividly colourful vignettes of experiences and encounters."
"James Reeve belongs to that rare breed of artists who can write. . . . It is a delightfully entertaining, if often shocking, memoir, an escapist antidote to our lockdown times. . . . Reeve has an eye for vivid detail and captures the absurdity of life with aplomb. . . . The book is as quirky as it is quixotic, and all human life is here."