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Passionate Nomad: The Life of Freya Stark av…
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Passionate Nomad: The Life of Freya Stark (urspr publ 1999; utgåvan 1999)

av Jane Geniesse (Författare)

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygOmnämnanden
4841150,458 (3.9)36
A New York Times Notable Book * Finalist for the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for First Nonfiction "Highly readable biography . . . The woman who emerges from these pages is a complex figure--heroic, driven . . . and entirely human."--Richard Bernstein, The New York Times Passionate Nomad captures the momentous life and times of Freya Stark with precision, compassion, and marvelous detail. Hailed by The Times of London as "the last of the Romantic Travellers" upon her death in 1993, Freya Stark combined unflappable bravery, formidable charm, fearsome intellect, and ferocious ambition to become the twentieth century's best-known woman traveler. Digging beneath the mythology, Geniesse uncovers a complex, controversial, and quixotic woman whose indomitable spirit was forged by contradictions: a child of privilege, Stark grew up in near poverty; yearning for formal education, she was largely self-taught; longing for love, she consistently focused on the wrong men. Despite these hardships, Stark's astonishing career spanned more than sixty years, during which she produced twenty-two books that sealed her reputation as a consummate woman of letters. This edition includes a new Epilogue by the author that, citing newly discovered evidence, calls into question the circumstances of Stark's birth and adds new insight into this adventurous and lively personality. Praise for Passionate Nomad "Passionate Nomad is a work of nonfiction that reads and sings with the drama and lilt of a fine novel. The story of Freya Stark is stunning, inspiring, sad, funny, unique, and moving. Jane Fletcher Geniesse tells it straight, but with a care for delicious detail and a sympathy for the characters that make this a truly special book."--Jim Lehrer "Passionate Nomad supplies a fascinating individual thread in the tapestry of twentiethcentury Middle Eastern history. . . . [Geniesse] has achieved, in the end, an admirable focus, at once critical and sympathetic. . . . For all Stark's unresolved contradictions, . . . her distinction as a latter-day woman of letters survives."--The New York Times Book Review "Compulsively readable . . . [Geniesse] has done a thorough job re-creating the life of a woman many consider to be the last of the great romantic travelers."--The Plain Dealer (Cleveland)… (mer)
Medlem:MLHart
Titel:Passionate Nomad: The Life of Freya Stark
Författare:Jane Geniesse (Författare)
Info:Random House (1999), Edition: 1st, 432 pages
Samlingar:Ditt bibliotek
Betyg:
Taggar:Ingen/inga

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Passionate Nomad: The Life of Freya Stark av Jane Fletcher Geniesse (1999)

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This very comprehensive biography of Freya Stark reads better than fiction. It is well annotated but the notes don't detract from the flow of the reading. Excerpts from letters augment the text and add a sense of Freya's thinking of the time. Freya Stark asked her mother to keep her letters so that they could be used instead of a diary - she was definitely thinking ahead for what she would need when she wrote her autobiography!
Freya's goal to offer enlightenment has been achieved by the biographer of this very well-written book.
The Prologue by the author is a great finish! ( )
  Kimberlyhi | Apr 15, 2023 |
This was a wonderfully written account of the life of legendary explorer, archaeologist, and adventurer Freya Stark. The book simply absorbs you as you begin with Freya's early life and troubled childhood. The trials she faced as a child spilled over into her adulthood. She was longing for love, longing for freedom, longing for adventure. She found that in the Arab world. Blazing a trail where Gertrude Bell left off, Freya's work became invaluable to the British Government. This "Passionate Nomad" wandered all over from Egypt to India, and it's all here for us in this wonderfully poetic look at her life.

Highly recommended. ( )
  briandrewz | May 7, 2022 |
"A book set somewhere you always wanted to go" ( )
  expatb | Jun 8, 2020 |
Timing is everything. I bought this a couple years ago and started it and could not get into it and skimmed to finish and thought I would just give it away but held on hoping to give it another chance. Now that I am deep into reading biographies of famous aristocrats, adventurers, artists, aesthetes, writers, and poets and politicians who filled Britain from 1900 to 2000 , I read Freya's name in Nicholas Haslam's biography and picked it up to check on something and began reading and got caught up. I learned an extraordinary amount about the middle east which really gave me perspective on its current situation and actually clarified and slightly changed my point of view. Freya was a remarkable woman of genius with a love of adventure and incredible bravery. The small bits of her writing included in this books give some idea of her abilities and explains why her books were so successful. I could go on and on about what she did before and after the war, the famous men she worked with who appreciated her talents. ( )
  Karen74Leigh | Sep 4, 2019 |
Freya Stark: tough but hypochondriac; sophisticated but naïve; intelligent but uneducated; friendly but demanding of her friends. Biographer Jane Fletcher Geniesse is even-handed, showing Ms. Stark warts and all. Freya Stark was the daughter of an unhappy marriage between Robert Stark, artist, and Flora Stark (his cousin; hence with the same family name). Flora was tall, beautiful, and flighty; her initial attraction to Robert seems to have paled fairly quickly, and Geniesse came across documentation that he was not really Freya’s father shortly after finishing her book; it had to be included as an appendix. The Starks moved to Italy, and Flora left Robert to become (probably) the mistress and assistant of an Italian factory owner; Robert left Italy to move to Canada and become a fruit farmer. Freya and her sister Vera visited the factory as children; Freya’s long hair was caught in rotating machinery and the scalp on the right side of her head was torn off – including her right ear. The disfigurement left her very self-conscious about her appearance; although she had plastic surgery later in life she always affected large hats and a hairstyle that covered most of the scarring.


Life in Italy was extremely hard for the Starks; Flora was very demanding of her children, treating them like maids, and seems to have allowed her probable lover Mario to make advances to both sisters (he eventually married Vera). Although Freya had some romances – notably with an older doctor – none prospered, and she eventually escaped her mother and home by traveling. Her first trip was to Lebanon, where she boarded with a native family while learning Arabic; she and a friend eventually tried to enter the forbidden Druse territory but were arrested by French authorities before getting too far. This set the pattern for her later adventures; she traveled “rough”, either sleeping on the ground or finding a room with local families. She was aided by her quick grasp of language and empathy for Middle Eastern women. Her breakthrough trip was a journey to Yemen, where her mapping won her acclaim from the Royal Geographic Society. This led to a further but less successful trip, the “Wakefield Expedition” (named after the British lord who financed it). Freya teamed up with archaeologist Gertrude Caton-Thompson and anthropologist Elinor Gardner to further explore the Yemen. Unfortunately the ladies did not hit it off; in particular Freya thought Caton-Thompson and Gardner treated the natives poorly while the other ladies complained of Stark’s disorganization and poor planning. Behind their backs the local British authorities referred to them as the “Foolish Virgins”. Stark wrote a extremely catty book about the expedition, but her publisher persuaded her to tone it down.


Other expeditions followed; to Turkey, Tran and Iraq. Freya was in Iraq, holed up in the British embassy during the “Golden Square” pro-Axis revolt; then she was recruited by the Foreign Office to use her language abilities and contact to set up a pro-Allied organization in Egypt. She knew everybody; Virginia Wolff, Lawrence Durrell, Ian Fleming, Alice Roosevelt-Longworth, Vita Sackville-West, General Wavell, and the Queen Mother (her relationship with General Wavell seems to have been helped by the fact that Wavell apparently had a fetish for women’s hats and Freya had them in abundance). After the war, she had a brief marriage with another diplomat, and then continued travelling well into her eighties. She died a few weeks after her 100th birthday.


In addition to her diplomatic work, she had a successful career as an author. Rather than keeping a journal of her travels, she sent numerous letters to friends and family while on the road, asking them to keep them; her travel books came from harvesting these letters. I haven’t read any of her books, but they generally received favorable reviews. Geniesse prefaces each chapter with a paragraph from one of Freya Stark’s books, and all seem well written.


It wasn’t all seamless glory; Stark had a number of character flaws that Geniesse is not reluctant to point out. She tended to be dismissive of inconvenient laws and regulations, starting with her venture into forbidden Druse territory in Lebanon and continuing through numerous petty smuggling adventures (she had false bottom suitcases built to facilitate this). A particularly notorious episode involved a car purchased in India during the war; since cars were rationed, she had to have government permission to buy one – which she got, presumably on the strength of her reputation. She drove through Afghanistan and Iran, then sold the car in Iran for about five times what she paid for it. The press jumped on her, claiming she had sold a “government” car – which wasn’t the case, but that was the myth that stuck. She also took advantage of her government connections on other occasions, getting picked up by the RAF after she became ill on one of her Yemen expeditions and getting a ride from Baghdad to Cairo on a Blenheim on another trip. Most disturbing was her treatment of friends and acquaintances, who she expected to run errands for her, make purchases, and sometimes engage in some of her smuggling adventures; some friendships broke up over this.


Stark’s romantic life was unfortunately less successful than her career as a traveler and author. Many of her letters express despondency over her appearance; she thought of herself as ugly and regretted not being a “beauty”. Photographs of her show the younger Freya might best be described as “winsome”; at 5’1” she was small (she always wore high heels, even in the desert, a fact commented on by astonished Arabs), had slightly crooked teeth, and, of course, always wore large hats to disguise her scars. She seems to have been attracted to married and gay men, but was breathtakingly naïve about homosexuality, especially considering the diplomatic milieu she had lived in for years. It’s not clear if she had any lovers; her letters hint at fending off a couple of passes and yearning after unavailable or unwilling men. In her fifties, she accepted a marriage proposal from Stewart Perowne, a diplomat eight years younger and a homosexual. Her astonished friends tried to hint that Perowne was “queer” - Stark took that to mean “unusual” and said there was nothing wrong with it; they were even more aghast when Freya turned girlish and bought an assortment of peek-a-boo lingerie for her trousseau. To be fair, Perowne might have thought Freya was a lesbian, as many of her female friends were single women; he may have anticipated a companiable relationship (similar to their mutual friends Harold Nicholson and Vita Sackville-West). Instead it was a dramatic failure; Freya didn’t adapt at all to the role of diplomatic wife (especially since Perowne was posted to the Caribbean, far away from her Middle East haunts) and was dismayed to discover what “queer” actually meant. She pushed heavily to get Perowne transferred to a more important post than Barbados, which was resented by Perowne and by the friends who she pressured. They eventually parted more or less amicably.


Geniesse is readable and mostly straightforward; if there’s a flaw it’s that she tends to psychoanalyze too much, attributing Stark’s talents or blaming her flaws on her father’s “desertion”, her mother’s “indifference”, or similar influences. Perhaps so; I tend to believe people are responsible for their own character but that’s just as unprovable as blaming their family life. There’s an appropriate selection of photographs from various stages in Freya Stark’s career, and an extensive bibliography. Footnotes and endnotes are unobtrusive. Sketch maps are frequent, but it would help if they showed the paths Stark took on her travels rather than just the general area. I’m most definitely inspired to read Freya Stark’s own books. ( )
  setnahkt | Dec 16, 2017 |
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» Lägg till fler författare

Författarens namnRollTyp av författareVerk?Status
Jane Fletcher Geniesseprimär författarealla utgåvorberäknat
Castro, Emilio-Germán MuñizÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
白須英子Översättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Fondevila, Ema RosaÖversättaremedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat
Obiols, IsabelFörordmedförfattarevissa utgåvorbekräftat

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A New York Times Notable Book * Finalist for the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for First Nonfiction "Highly readable biography . . . The woman who emerges from these pages is a complex figure--heroic, driven . . . and entirely human."--Richard Bernstein, The New York Times Passionate Nomad captures the momentous life and times of Freya Stark with precision, compassion, and marvelous detail. Hailed by The Times of London as "the last of the Romantic Travellers" upon her death in 1993, Freya Stark combined unflappable bravery, formidable charm, fearsome intellect, and ferocious ambition to become the twentieth century's best-known woman traveler. Digging beneath the mythology, Geniesse uncovers a complex, controversial, and quixotic woman whose indomitable spirit was forged by contradictions: a child of privilege, Stark grew up in near poverty; yearning for formal education, she was largely self-taught; longing for love, she consistently focused on the wrong men. Despite these hardships, Stark's astonishing career spanned more than sixty years, during which she produced twenty-two books that sealed her reputation as a consummate woman of letters. This edition includes a new Epilogue by the author that, citing newly discovered evidence, calls into question the circumstances of Stark's birth and adds new insight into this adventurous and lively personality. Praise for Passionate Nomad "Passionate Nomad is a work of nonfiction that reads and sings with the drama and lilt of a fine novel. The story of Freya Stark is stunning, inspiring, sad, funny, unique, and moving. Jane Fletcher Geniesse tells it straight, but with a care for delicious detail and a sympathy for the characters that make this a truly special book."--Jim Lehrer "Passionate Nomad supplies a fascinating individual thread in the tapestry of twentiethcentury Middle Eastern history. . . . [Geniesse] has achieved, in the end, an admirable focus, at once critical and sympathetic. . . . For all Stark's unresolved contradictions, . . . her distinction as a latter-day woman of letters survives."--The New York Times Book Review "Compulsively readable . . . [Geniesse] has done a thorough job re-creating the life of a woman many consider to be the last of the great romantic travelers."--The Plain Dealer (Cleveland)

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