Författarbild
5 verk 297 medlemmar 8 recensioner 1 favoritmärkta

Om författaren

Tim Cope is a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and an award-winning adventurer, author, filmmaker, and motivational speaker with a special interest in Central Asia and states of the former Soviet Union. He has studied as a wilderness guide in the Finnish and Russian Arctic, ridden a bicycle visa mer across Russia to China, and rowed about 4,500 Km through Siberia to the Arctic Ocean. He lives in Victoria, Australia, and travels annually to Mongolia as a trekking guide. visa färre

Verk av Tim Cope

Taggad

Allmänna fakta

Medlemmar

Recensioner

For me, this book itself was a long journey. My Russian barber gave me his copy, so despite it not being my genre I gave it a try. I’m glad I read it, but I found myself unsympathetic to the author. He seemed self-absorbed and emotionally detached from the animals and people around him. When his girlfriend, who accompanied him for months at the start of the journey, told him from Germany that she needed to have an operation for a brain tumor he did not stop his travels to go to her. Yet, many times during this journey he did leave his dog and horses for weeks or months at a time to return to the world. So much for an epic journey and an uninterrupted quest.
Cope’s interaction with the nature of the steppe was by far the best part of the book. His inclusion of the history of the land and the peoples was also well done, as he scattered it in along the way. Despite his fascination with Genghis Khan and other nomadic warriors, he did not fail to mention the millions of people slaughtered by them. I guess their expert horsemanship and the civilization they brought with them balanced things out.
Many families who welcomed this strange traveler into their homes must have been left out of the story. Some were not, but the emphasis was given to the individuals who were consumed by vodka and alcoholism. It paints a depressing picture.
It was not until the end of the journey and of the book that Cope includes an epilogue, where he briefly tells what happened to the animals and people he met. I suspect that my poor impression of him comes more from a defect in his writing than in his character.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
drardavis | 6 andra recensioner | Nov 20, 2022 |
Review of: Tim & Tigon, by Tim Cope
by Stan Prager (7-6-21)

About five years ago, I read what I still consider to be the finest travel and adventure book I have ever come across, On the Trail of Genghis Khan: An Epic Journey Through the Land of the Nomads, by Tim Cope, a remarkable tale of an intrepid young Australian who in 2004 set out on a three-year mostly solo trek on horseback across the Eurasian steppe from Mongolia to Hungary—some 10,000 kilometers (about 6,200 miles)—roughly retracing routes followed by Genghis Khan and his steppe warriors. An extraordinary individual, Cope refused to carry a firearm, despite warnings against potential predators of the animal or human kind to menace an untested foreigner alone on the vast and often perilous steppe corridor, instead relying on his instincts, personality, and determination to succeed, regardless of the odds. Oh, and those odds seem further stacked against him because despite his outsize ambition, he is quite an inexperienced horseman—in fact his only previous attempt on horseback as a child left him with a broken arm! Nevertheless, his only companions for the bulk of the journey ahead would be three horses—and a dog named Tigon foisted upon him against his will that would become his best friend.
My 2016 review of On the Trail of Genghis Khan—which Cope featured on his website for a time—sparked an email correspondence between us, and shortly after publication he sent me an inscribed copy of his latest work, Tim & Tigon, stamped with Tigon’s footprints. I’m always a little nervous in these circumstances: what if the new book falls short? As it turned out, such concerns were misplaced; I enjoyed it so much I bought another copy to give as a gift!
In Kazakhstan, early in his journey, a herder named Aset connived to shift custody of a scrawny six-month-old puppy to Cope, insisting it would serve both as badly needed company during long periods of isolation as well as an ally to warn against wolves. The dog, a short-haired breed of hound known as a tazi, was named Tigon, which translates into something like “fast wind.” Tim was less than receptive, but Aset was persuasive: “In our country dogs choose their owners. Tigon is yours.” [p89] That initial grudging acceptance was to develop into a critical bond that was strengthened again and again during the many challenges that lay ahead. In fact, Tim’s connection with Tigon came to represent the author’s single most significant relationship in the course of this epic trek. Hence the title of this book.
Tim & Tigon defies simple categorization. On one level, it is a compact re-telling of On the Trail of Genghis Khan, but it’s not simply an abridged version of the earlier book. Styled as a Young Adult (YA) work, it has appeal to a much broader audience. And while it might be tempting to brand it as some kind of heartwarming boy and his dog tale, it is marked by a much greater complexity. Finally, as with the first book, it is bound to frustrate any librarian looking to shelve it properly: Is it memoir? Is it travel? Is it adventure? Is it survival? Is it a book about animals? It turns out to be about all of these and more.
As the title suggests, the emphasis this time finds focus upon the unique connection that develops between a once reluctant Tim and the dog that becomes nothing less than his full partner in the struggle to survive over thousands of miles of terrain marked by an often-hostile environment that frequently saw extreme temperatures of heat and cold, conditions both difficult and dangerous, as well as numerous obstacles. But despite the top billing neither Tim nor Tigon are the main characters here. Instead, as the narrative comes to reveal again and again, the true stars of this magnificent odyssey are the land and its peoples, a sometimes-forbidding landscape that hosts remarkably resilient, enterprising, and surprisingly optimistic folks—clans, families and individuals that are ever undaunted by highly challenging lifeways that have their roots in centuries-old customs.
Stalin effectively strangled their traditional nomadic ways in the former Soviet Union by enforcing borders that were unknown to their ancestors, but he never crushed their collective spirit. And long after the U.S.S.R went out of business, these nomads still thrive, their orbits perhaps more circumscribed, their horses and camels supplemented—if not supplanted—by jeeps and motorbikes. They still make their homes in portable tents known as yurts, although these days many sport TV sets served by satellite and powered by generators. The overwhelming majority welcome the author into their humble camps, often with unexpected enthusiasm and outsize hospitality, generously offering him food and shelter and tending to his animals, even as many are themselves scraping by in conditions that can best be described as hardscrabble. The shared empathy between Cope and his hosts is marvelously palpable throughout the narrative, and it is this authenticity that distinguishes his work. It is clear that Tim is a great listener, and despite how alien he must have appeared upon arrival in these remote camps, he quickly establishes rapport with men, women, children, clan elders—the old and the young—and remarkably repeats this feat in Mongolia, in Kazakhstan, in Russia, and beyond. This turns out to be his finest achievement: his talents with a pen are evident, to be sure, but the story he relates would hardly be as impressive if not for that element.
When Tim’s amazing journey across the steppe ended in Hungary in 2007, joy mingled with a certain melancholy at the realization that he would have to leave Tigon behind when he returned home. But the obstacles of a an out-of-reach price tag and a mandatory quarantine were eventually overcome, and a little more than a year later, Tigon joined Tim in Australia. Tigon went on to sire many puppies and lived to a ripe old age before, tragically, the dog that once braved perils large and small on the harsh landscapes of the Eurasian steppe fell before the wheels of a speeding car on the Australian macadam. Tim was devastated by his loss, so this book is also, of course, a tribute to Tigon. My signed copy is inscribed with the Kazakh saying that served as a kind of ongoing guidepost to their trek together: “Trust in fate … but always tie up the camel.” That made me smile, but that smile was tinged with sadness as I gazed upon Tigon’s footprint stamped just below it. Tigon is gone, but he left an indelible mark not only on Tim, who perhaps still grieves for him, but also upon every reader, young and old, who is touched by his story.

[I reviewed Tim Cope’s earlier book, On the Trail of Genghis Khan: An Epic Journey Through the Land of the Nomads, here: https://regarp.com/2016/05/08/review-of-on-the-trail-of-genghis-khan-an-epic-jou... ]

Review of: Tim & Tigon, by Tim Cope https://regarp.com/2021/07/06/review-of-tim-tigon-by-tim-cope/

Podcast review available at Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, TuneIn, Pandora & Podbean here https://www.podbean.com/ew/pb-b77z7-1080f11
… (mer)
1 rösta
Flaggad
Garp83 | Jul 6, 2021 |
A wonderful read. While the story teller often seemed to hid or mask his true thoughts and motives from the reader it was never the less a fact filled adventure that had me learning of, and longing for such an adventure, and such a past and place as he paints in this book.
 
Flaggad
Teufle | 6 andra recensioner | Jul 9, 2017 |
Epic journey over the breadth of Asia, in the horse tracks of Genghis Khan.
 
Flaggad
DramMan | 6 andra recensioner | Jun 7, 2016 |

Listor

Priser

Du skulle kanske också gilla

Associerade författare

Statistik

Verk
5
Medlemmar
297
Popularitet
#78,942
Betyg
3.9
Recensioner
8
ISBN
26
Språk
1
Favoritmärkt
1

Tabeller & diagram