Emails from the Edge (41 page)

BOOK: Emails from the Edge
12.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bibby, Geoffrey (1996)
Looking for Dilmun
,Stacey International, London
Birenbaum, Halina (1994)
Hope Is the Last To Die: A Personal Documentation of Nazi Terror
, Publishing House of the State Museum in Oswiecim (Auschwitz), Poland
Bulgakov, Mikhail (1996),
The White Guard
, The Harvill Press, London
Burton, Sir Richard (trans.) (1997),
Arabian Nights
, Penguin Books, London
Carlyon, Les (2001),
Gallipoli
, Pan Macmillan, Sydney
Carver, Robert (1999),
The Accursed Mountains: Journeys in Albania
, Flamingo, London
Dalrymple, William (1998),
From the Holy Mountain: A Journey in the Shadow of Byzantium
, Flamingo, London
Eastwick, Edward B. (1976 reprint of 1864 original),
Journal of a Diplomate's Three Years' Residence in Persia
, Vols 1–2, Offset Press, Tehran
Hasek, Jaroslav (1974),
The Good Soldier Svejk
, Penguin Books, London
Herodotus (1996),
The Histories
, Penguin Books, London
Hitchens, Christopher (1997),
Hostage to History: Cyprus from the Ottomans to Kissinger
, Verso, London and New York
Hopkirk, Peter (1991),
The Great Game: On Secret Service in High Asia
, Oxford University Press, Oxford
Hourani, Albert (1992),
A History of the Arab Peoples
, Faber and Faber, London
Hudik, Pavol (ed.) (2002),
In Search of Homo Sapiens:
Twenty-five Contemporary Slovak Short Stories
, The Publishing House of the Slovak Writers' Society, Bratislava
Jokai, Mor (2001),
The Man with the Golden Touch
, Corvina Books, Budapest
Kaplan, Robert D. (1996),
Balkan Ghosts: A Journey Through History
, Vintage Books, New York
Kapuscinski, Ryszard (1995),
Imperium
, Granta Books, London
Kinross, Patrick (1964),
Atatürk: The Rebirth of a Nation
, Phoenix, London
Klinge, Matti and Kolbe, Laura, (1999),
Helsinki: Daughter of the Baltic: A Short Biography
, Otava Publishing, Helsinki
Kundera, Milan (2000),
The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
, Faber and Faber, London
Lamb, Christina (1991),
Waiting for Allah
, Viking, New Delhi
Lawrence, T.E. (1926),
Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph
, Doubleday, New York
Lermontov, Mikhail (2001),
A Hero of Our Time
, Penguin Books, London
Loti, Pierre (2002),
Constantinople in 1890
, Unlem Basim Yayincilik, Istanbul
Maalouf, Amin (1995),
The Rock of Tanios
, Abacus, London
Mackintosh-Smith, Tim (2001),
Travels with a Tangerine: A Journey in the Footnotes of Ibn Battutah
, John Murray Publishers, London
Makdisi, Jean Said (1999),
Beirut Fragments: A War Memoir
, Persea Books, New York
Malcolm, Noel (2002),
Bosnia, A Short History
, Pan Books, London, Basingstoke and Oxford
Mansfield, Peter (1992),
The Arabs
, Penguin Books, London
May, Walter (trans.) (1999),
Manas: The Great Campaign
, Kyrgyz Heroic Epos, National Academy of Sciences of the Kyrgyz Republic, Institute of Literature and Arts, Bishkek
Milosz, Czeslaw (2001),
The Captive Mind
, Penguin Books, London
Nicholson, Reynold A. (trans.) (1950),
Rumi, Poet and Mystic 1207–1273
, Allen and Unwin, London
Ormanian, Malachia, Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople (2000),
The Church of Armenia
, Armenian Holy Apostolic Church Canadian Diocese, Montreal
Plutarch (1960),
The Rise and Fall of Athens: Nine Greek Lives
, Penguin Books, London
Pullerits, Albert (ed.),
The Estonian Yearbook 1927
, Government Printing Office, Tallinn
Purmonen, Veikko (ed.) (1981),
Orthodoxy in Finland: Past and Present
, Orthodox Clergy Association, Kuopio
Reid, Anna (1998),
Borderland: A Journey Through the History of Ukraine
, Phoenix, London
Said, Edward W. (1995),
Orientalism: Western Concepts of the Orient
, Penguin Books, London
Said, Kurban (1990),
Ali & Nino
, Robin Clark Ltd, London
Salehpour, Salehe (trans.) (1998),
Divan of Hafez
, Booteh Press, Tehran
Seal, Jeremy (1995),
A Fez of the Heart: Travels Around Turkey in Search of a Hat
, Picador, London
Sidhwa, Ervad Godrej Dinshawji (2000),
Discourses on Zoroastrianism
, Karachi
Skultans, Vieda (1998),
The Testimony of Lives: Narrative and Memory in Post-Soviet Latvia
, Routledge, London
Stark, Freya (2001),
The Valleys of the Assassins
, The Modern Library, New York
Thesiger, Wilfred (1991),
Arabian Sands
, Penguin Books, London
Thubron Colin (1986),
Journey into Cyprus
, Penguin Books, London
Thubron, Colin (1994),
The Lost Heart of Asia
, William Heinemann, London
Thucydides (1972),
History of the Peloponnesian War
, Penguin Books, London
Trinkunas, Jonas (ed.) (1999),
Of Gods and Holidays: The Baltic Heritage
, Tverme, Vilnius
West, Rebecca (2001),
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon: A Journey Through Yugoslavia
, Canongate Books, Edinburgh (reprint of the work first published by Macmillan, 1942)
Young, Gavin (1999),
Eye on the World
, Penguin Books, London
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
AUSTRALIA
First and foremost, Mum and Dad, whose moral support in uncertain times was matched only by their financial support. You got me from there to here.
My first guide to the publishing world, Teresa Pitt, who acted on an impulse: I hope this volume feels like your justification.
All the crew at Transit Lounge: Barry and Rhonda Scott, Tess Rice and Tim McQuiston. You took a wounded bird and made it fly.
Other publishing professionals who demonstrated and maintained faith in my work: above all, Siobhán Cantrill, Anouska Jones (you're revisionists, in the nicest sense); and Suzanne Falkiner, several of whose textual amendments I have incorporated with gratitude.
Brad and Ryan Warburton, who told me a decade ago that I should write a book. Well, I've kept my part of the bargain …
Neil: ready when you are.
Bruce and Els: for being there when I needed you.
The late Dr Gerald Ungar, Dr Terry Lim, Mr Doug Brown and surgical team (you know who you are): for bringing me back from the brink. The nurses and specialist staff on Ward 13 and in rehab at the Austin: for seeing me through, and for all your help, physical and philosophical. Terry Lane and Jon Faine, and Sarah Ashley, Jon's producer, the first to think my story might interest the wider world.
Garry Linnell: for reminding me why we write.
Michael Gawenda and Rod Wiedermann: for sending me to a tranquil corner.
Gideon Haigh, severely tested friend: your Bastille Day email liberated the book within.
Mal Schmidtke: for refusing to sell me short, even in a bearish market. Gary Walsh: it was through your generosity, with just a tincture of forbearance, that ‘Emails from the Edge' first saw the light in the travel pages of
The Age
.
Creighton Burns: for your calm and steady wisdom, combined with the soundest of advice.
Lucas, Linda and Joash Yong: thanks for doing your best to see the mail got through.
Jon and Jenny Cook: for looking after my home as if it were your own. T. and D.: you know why.
Danny, Michael and all the crew at Mobility Plus: you were right about durability.
Lisa and Graham, Elsternwick Camera Centre.
ENGLAND
The late Gavin Young, and his ‘sea anchor', Gritta Weil, for showing faith in works yet unattempted – in particular to Gavin for giving my voyage his benediction, in the first month of the millennium and the last of his life.
Stephanie Bunbury, for saving my life and for calling the professionals in. This book owes everything to you.
NAMIBIA
Craig Newby and Kris Pate: for making the computer do its job so that I could do mine.
Gwen Lister, founder and editor of
The Namibian:
for giving me time to write the book. And everyone else at the world's pluckiest newspaper who gave me the privilege of your company.
Viviane and Günther Scholz, in Swakopmund: for the gift of a family Christmas and, Viviane, for taking on the task of taming the Beast.
Graham Hopwood: for exercising the power o' the giftie, and keeping me more or less focused (as the need arose).
Werner Menges: for providing inspiration, and being one.
Christelle and Jaco Reed at Puccini: for giving me space to write the book.
SOUTH AFRICA
To
The Star
newspaper, especially
Saturday Star
executive editor Brendan Seery, chief sub-editor Francois Pienaar and my former travel-section colleague, Jenny de Klerk, for not being driven to distraction by it all. (Ah, but you were!)
Denis Beckett, for moral support and sound practical advice.
Jonathan Ancer: For selecting the title of Chapter 4.
Glenda and Shane Seagall at Chroma copying services, Norwood, Johannesburg.
UNITED STATES
Robert Frank and Carole Cheung: I was tired and true of heart. And also, you were tired and true of heart.
KAZAKHSTAN
Klara Duisengalieva, president, Hotel Zhetisu, Almaty: for outstanding hospitality and delegating staff to see me safely onto the northbound train.
UZBEKISTAN
Raisa Gareyeva, Azat and all my other friends at your travel agency, for unstinting hospitality, dependable companionship, generous use of your computers and guiding me through the postal and railway bureaucracies. May Allah preserve Bukhara!
TURKMENISTAN
Galina Yevgeniya, Mary: the world's leading authority on its least remembered massacre.
AZERBAIJAN
Fuad Axundhov, the most knowledgeable tourist guide in Old, or New, Baku.
GEORGIA
Zviad Mirgatia and Mark Mullen, National Democratic Institute for International Affairs: thanks for walking me through Georgia's politics on the morning of September 11, 2001. You were saying?
IRAN
Tom and Rebecca Hathaway, Tehran: in humble gratitude for your hospitality and long-suffering patience. Sorry if I got in the way.
Komeil Noofeli, travel guide, courier and drifter: for unbottling Shiraz and uncorking Persepolis.
OMAN
Rosemary Hector: for your hospitality and efficiency, taking me wadi-bashing and out to the bullfight, then letting me rest up at your home.
LEBANON
Ayssar abou Taif, super-receptionist at the Hotel Regis, Ain al-Mreisse, downtown Beirut: for doing as much as anyone to implant the idea of humanitourism in my brain.
GREECE
The generous soul who runs Santorini's best hotel, the Palladion. Lou Economopoulos and Litsa Rovolis: for reminding me why we have a Greek word for the mood of fond recall. It was even better than the old times.
BULGARIA
Tsvetelina Ivanova (Vier Pfoten publicity director) and Ibrahim Garaliiski (at the park): for bearing with me.
YUGOSLAVIA (AS YOU WERE)
Ivana and Jelena, in beautiful Kotor, who wished me to ‘remember us and our town and country with pleasure': wish granted.
CROATIA
Maya Petríc, managing director of Magnum Trade d.o.o.: your entrepreneurial spirit, and goodwill, gave me a wonderful first impression of Split – and it has lasted.
BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA
Amelie Saríc and Professor Meliha Kulukchiha-Melly, Pavarotti Music Centre, Mostar: for building another mighty bridge. All donations to the work of the centre ([email protected]) are gratefully appreciated.
ROMANIA
Roberto Paulet, the master enamel-cup decorator and receptionist, Villa Helga Youth Hostel, Bucharest.
MOLDOVA
Sergei Mifodovski ([email protected]) and Vikki: for opening windows onto Moldovan realities. (Vikki, I hope you found your man, and happiness, wherever you're living now.)
UKRAINE
Janna Belousova and all the team at Eugenia: you lit up Odessa on the darkest days of the year.
GERMANY
Lotti Villinger, old friend and super-reliable in time of need: without you I might have given up and gone home early.
BELARUS
Oleg Loiko and family: the silver watch is treasured still. I hope you're all happy in Canada.
FINLAND
Father Deacon Vladimir (William Paul) Lysak, artist, baker, cook, iconographer, writer and Stavrophor monk at New Valamo Monastery: wouldn't have missed that aurora borealis for the (sublunary) world. Santa Claus: go back to Turkey, the jig is up.

Other books

It Had To Be You by Janice Thompson
Tough Guys Don't Dance by Norman Mailer
Invincible by Dawn Metcalf
Rumble Fish by S. E. Hinton
TouchofTopaz by N.J. Walters
TICEES by Mills, Shae
All Fall Down by Carlene Thompson