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Archive for June, 2010

Media Flash July 2010

Posted by Nick Redmayne on 30 June 2010

News

Kyrgyzstan

KyrgyzstanIntercommunal violence afflicting the people of Kyrgyzstan’s second city, Osh, has been leading the news of late. Sources within the newly established interim Kyrgyz government suggest 200 have died in attacks that appear to have targeted the city’s ethnic Uzbek population, others put the figure nearer 2,000. The United Nations estimates that almost 400,000 people have been displaced by the fighting including thousands of ethnic Uzbeks who have sought sanctuary across the border in Uzbekistan.

Author of Bradt’s Kyrgyzstan guide, Laurence Mitchell, comments ‘Things appear to have quietened down in Osh, Jalalabad and the south but it is still too soon to recommend travelling there for the time being. The British FCO currently advises against all travel to any part of Osh and Jalalabad provinces. Bishkek, and the north in general, is currently stable and safe to visit. Presidential elections proposed for October this year have been postponed until 2011, although the referendum vote of June 27th went ahead without incident. Travellers should be aware that some border crossings may close wthout warning. Border crossings with Uzbekistan are closed for the foreseeable future for non-Uzbeks.’

Osh lies in Central Asia’s Fergana Valley, an area whose natural ethnic constituency Stalin chose to ignore and instead apportion territory in an arbitrary manner across the three Soviet republics of Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. It’s generally understood that this intrinsic instability was a foundation of the Kremlin’s strategy to divide, rule, and maintain dependence on Moscow. Since the collapse of the Soviet super state, and specifically in the case of Kyrgyzstan since the overthrow of Kurmanbek Bakiyev’s discredited government, a power vacuum has existed, leading at least in part to recurrent ethnic tensions. More…

New Titles

UruguayUruguay

With the merciful termination of England’s residency at the global football love-in, at least the flags can come down and the hollow celebration of a ‘collective’, not a team, of overpaid idiot savants finally end. Not so in Uruguay… Winners of the first soccer World Cup, and with a very un-English record of success in the current competition, Uruguay play Ghana 2nd July. Bradt’s new, dedicated Uruguay guide is out this month and if you haven’t already seen the press release it’s here – and for retail info here – More…

Paraguay

ParaguayContinuing, briefly, the World Cup theme, needless to say neither the ‘hand’ nor ‘ref’ of God has yet intervened to effect the Paraguayan team’s premature flight to Asuncion – the happy band from one of South America’s poorest countries plays again today. What’s more, Paraguay author and former theologian Margaret Hebblethwaite appears to have been inspired by the writings of Times Sport Correspondent, and Bad Birdwatcher, Simon Barnes. Barnes’s Paraguayan tales of ‘…birds, people, frogs, toads and wood sprites’ obviously did the trick as Hebblethwaite upped sticks and moved there full time in 2000. For a country that lies at the heart of South America, it’s often ignored, except by the ‘US Pigeon shooters’ and Brazilian sport fishers. Hebblethwaite describes Paraguay as ‘mercifully free of gringos’, and continues ‘It is, to a large extent, pure, virgin, undiscovered territory. You do not want to tell other people about it, for fear of spoiling it for yourself. And yet at the same time you do want to tell other people about it because you love it so much.’ Everyone at Bradt is familiar with that dilemma. More…

100 Bizarre Animals

100 Bizarre AnimalsSecularists attempting to stem the tide of reactionary anti-evolutionary theories espousing intelligent design may acquire a second string to their bow with the publication of Bradt’s 100 Bizarre Animals. 100 fabulous beasts that in every aspect of their being seem to defy the application of either ‘intelligence’ or ‘design’, are succinctly collated in a colourful celebration of extreme genetic randomness reassuringly manifest in the natural world. From star-nosed moles, lowland streaked tenrecs and narwhals, to aye-ayes, ground pangolins, shoebills and short-beaked echidnas, this is animal kingdom as designed by competing motor manufacturers, not an all knowing, all powerful god. Okay, so there are some Ferraris, a few Jaguars, and the occasional Alfa Romeo but the you can’t miss the slow convoy of rusty orange Austin Allegros, driven by vicars, occupying the outside lane, forgotten indicators still flashing away. 100 Bizarre Animals is not out till August but preview PDF spreads are available on request – just drop me an email. More

New Editions

Estonia

EstoniaNeil Taylor sets out on his sixth edition crusade to convert us all into Estonians, and remarkably, through a combination of wit, charm, enthusiasm and encyclopaedic knowledge his work is almost done. Indeed The Economist has already made Estonia ‘Essential Reading’ – see here. In his introduction Neil says what we’ve all long suspected, ‘Writing this book makes me feel young again. I visit bars that have an unspoken upper age limit of 25. I am often seen in restaurants well after 23.00 and in clothes that should not have been brought into the 21st century.’ Neil has displayed the courage of his convictions by buying an apartment in Tallinn, soon to be European Capital of Culture 2011, and characteristically apologises for having an easier time than most Bradt authors: ‘Buses and trains run to time and are sufficiently comfortable for me to keep notes… However, journeys in them do not provide enough time for me to master the 14 cases of the Estonian language. Perhaps I will reach six before the next edition.’ And if that doesn’t make you feel like an underachiever… Estonia 6 is out now! More…

Serbia

SerbiaSerbs and Serbia have a mixed press in Western Europe, an immediate hangover for the break up of Yugoslavia, the conflicts that then arose, including the NATO’s intervention in Kosovo and Bosnia Herzegovina, and the procession of Serbian war criminals through the Hague’s international courts. Laurence Mitchell, author of Bradt’s third edition Serbia guide thinks ‘Thankfully, Serbia’s bad-boy reputation is wearing a bit thin these days and its demonised reputation is starting to be seen as a thing of the past… 2010 sees the country’s elevation to the so-called Schengen White List which will herald the lifting of trade restrictions and the easing of visa requirements for its citizens.’ Certainly Belgrade’s arrival on the party scene has already suffused the cognoscenti, and each year more visitors arrive for Novi Sad’s summer EXIT festival – not a celebration of euthanasia, rather a glitzed-up Balkan Glastonbury – and whilst hosting the Eurovision Song Contest may have a been a double edged sword, it does appear as though Mitchell has a point. Serbia 3 is due for publication mid July 2010. More…

Bosnia & Herzegovina

Bosnia & HerzegovinaIt’s 15 years since the Dayton Peace Accords brought an end to Bosnia’s bloody conflict. Today, though Bosnia & Herzegovina’s (BiH) resulting two entities, Republika Srpska and the Federation of Bosnia & Herzegovina, are peaceful, current affairs pundits are voicing doubts over Dayton’s long-term durability. Tim Clancy, Sarajevo resident and author of Bradt’s third edition Bosnia & Herzegovina, reports that ‘the independence vote in Montenegro and the succession of Kosovo have again flared heated debates about Bosnia’s status. This political stalemate has halted political progress since then.’ However, he then points to some hopeful signs, ‘Another round of elections is due in October 2010, and polls suggest the nationalist parties’ stronghold might finally be broken.’ For the visitor, Clancy suggests these political machinations will be barely discernible, ‘Cafes are always full of smiling faces, people walk the streets wearing the finest of European fashions, and the warm hospitality you’re sure to find everywhere will certainly make you ask “Why did this happen here? This really is a great place.” Bosnians ask themselves this question every day.’ Bosnia & Herzegovina 3 due August 2010. More…

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Uruguay

Posted by Nick Redmayne on 25 June 2010

UruguayWinners of the first soccer World Cup, in whose waters WW2 pocket battleship Graf Spee finally pulled the plug, and point of origin for the Fray Bentos meat pie phenomena – already Uruguay encompasses enough historic trivia for a free pass into the twilight zone of pub quiz celebrity.  Combine this with the knowledge that Britain’s ‘literary Mick Jagger’, Martin Amis, chose to leave London for Uruguay, and a secret suspicion that the capital city Montevideo inspired a global home entertainment empire, and South America has never scored so highly on intrigue…

The new Bradt guide describes the continent’s second smallest country as one of the region’s most peaceful states, with minimal corruption and almost 100% literacy.  And it’s not just an author’s indulgent hyperbole – in 2008 The Economist characterised Montevideo as the most ‘liveable’ city in Latin America.  Author Tim Burford suggests ‘Uruguay has a similar relationship to Argentina as Canada has to the United States, Ireland to the United Kingdom, or Belgium to France – a permanent sense of being overshadowed by a larger, louder neighbour, while feeling deep inside that they are the smarter, wittier, more creative ones.’ Burford looks beyond football, battleships and meat pies to explore Montevideo’s Art Deco architecture, the coast’s boho-chic fishing villages, endless pristine beaches, wildlife-suffused wetlands and lagoons, and gets lost under the big skies of vast prairie grasslands.  Uruguay is the country’s first and only dedicated English-language guidebook, yet even without this qualification the wealth of original and up-to-date research manifest within its covers makes Bradt’s guide the best companion for all leisure and business travellers.

Tim Burford studied languages at Oxford and began writing for Bradt in 1991.  Initially covering hiking in eastern and central Europe, he progressed to backpacking and ecotourism in Latin America.  Having now completed nine Bradt guides, he love trains and rail travel, flying only across oceans by virtue of necessity.

Title: Uruguay
Author: Tim Burford
Publisher: Bradt Travel Guides
Publication:     June 2010
Price:        £15.99
ISBN:
978 1 84162 316 0

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New Guidebook Series

Posted by Nick Redmayne on 11 June 2010

Life’s pace has accelerated. Journeys once measured in months now take hours; even food only counts if it’s fast.  Bradt’s new series of Slow…  guides takes the first available exit from today’s superhighway lifestyle and explores a road less travelled through some of Britain’s most beautiful landscapes.

Inspired by the spirit of the Slow Food movement and with a reflective nod towards Jerome K Jerome’s Three Men in a Boat, this collaboration between Bradt and Sawday’s follows no formulaic headline-ticking template. The guides are joyously personal and subjective, each author freely espousing his or her own insights on their respective homes.  Slow Devon & Exmoor, Slow Norfolk & Suffok and Slow North Yorkshire all encompass original material, much of which has not appeared in print before.  Each title combines practical travel information with interviews with local people, coverage of atmospheric historic sites, descriptions of the most scenic walks, hikes and cycle rides, and tips on the best places to observe nature. Sawday’s carefully researched pub and accommodation listings provide a wealth of characterful places to quench your thirst and lay your head.

Slow observations include:

  • Slow Devon and Exmoor‘Even if you’ve managed to evade Lorna Doone associations until now, if you go to Oare you’re doomed to get involved. R D Blackmore’s grandfather was rector here from 1809 to 1842 so the author of Lorna Doone knew the place well – and used it. Setting that aside, it’s a church with lots of interest. Note the box pews: the one for the squire has seats around three sides so he and his family could be fenced off from his labourers, and were in a position to ignore the vicar if so inclined.’ – Hilary Bradt
  • Slow Norfolk & Suffolk ‘Old Diss centres around a body of water, The Mere, a six-acre, spring-fed lake that gives the town its name (‘dice’ in Anglo-Saxon means ‘standing water’, or words to that effect). Diss folk claim that this glacial remnant is at least 60 feet deep, with about 20 feet of water and 40 feet of mud, so it is not a place to drop your keys.’ – Laurence Mitchell
  • Slow North Yorkshire‘I had one of those it’s-hard-to-imagine moments whilst basking in the sun, sipping a cup of tea on a bench outside a tea room in Gunnerside.  The only sounds were the tinkling of water from the nearby beck, and the odd distant clang of a blacksmith’s hammer.  Enveloped in this rural comfort blanket, it was indeed astonishing to consider the frantic industrial past of 150 years ago, when Gunnerside was knicknamed Klondike.’ – Mike Bagshaw

Slow Jackets

For review copies contact nick.redmayne@bradtguides.com or 01753 893 444

Slow Devon & Exmoor by Hilary Bradt                   ISBN 978 1 84162322 1
Slow Norfolk & Suffolk
by Laurence Mitchell          ISBN 978 1 84162321 4
Slow North Yorkshire by Mike Bagshaw                 ISBN 978 1 84162323 8
Cost All titles £14.99
Publication June 2010

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