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Dervla Murphy

    28 novembre 1931 – 22 maggio 2022

    Questa autrice irlandese è rinomata per i suoi libri di viaggio d'avventura, che narrano spedizioni ciclistiche in solitaria intraprese per oltre quattro decenni. Le sue narrazioni sono caratterizzate da un crudo realismo e da un'attenzione all'esperienza senza filtri del viaggiare leggeri e affidandosi all'ospitalità locale. Intreccia profonde osservazioni su diverse culture e complessi panorami politici nei suoi resoconti, senza paura di esprimere opinioni ferme su questioni controverse.

    Dervla Murphy
    Kidding Around
    A Month by the Sea: Encounters in Gaza
    Full Tilt
    Where the Indus is Young
    A Month by the Sea
    Wheels within Wheels
    • 2023

      Life at Full Tilt is a whirlwind tour of Dervla Murphy s travels. It begins in Spain in 1956, before her first book, and follows in her tracks for over fifty years, including descriptions of her beloved Afghanistan in 1963, of the Peruvian Andes, of South, West and East Africa and most recently of the troubled territories of Palestine and Israel.

      Life at Full Tilt
    • 2019

      Kidding Around

      • 224pagine
      • 8 ore di lettura

      Kidding Around: Tales of Travel with Children - anthology of 37 stories about travelling with children with contributions from Dervla Murphy, Maria Pieri, Adrian Phillips, Mike Unwin, Amy-Jane Beer, Nicola Chester and others. Tales span five continents and range from embarrassing to hair-raising to magical moments with wild creatures.

      Kidding Around
    • 2015

      A MONTH BY THE SEA gives unique insight into the way in which isolation has shaped this society: how it radicalises young men and plays into the hands of dominating patriarchs, yet also how it hardens determination not to give in and turns family into a towering source of support.

      A Month by the Sea
    • 2013

      Life in Gaza is marked by significant challenges, including structural issues and mental health struggles, yet it thrives on political engagement and strong family bonds. The author offers a keen perspective on how isolation has profoundly influenced the community, revealing both the hardships and the resilience of its people.

      A Month by the Sea: Encounters in Gaza
    • 2010

      Wheels within Wheels

      • 240pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Dervla Murphy begins her autobiography in Lismore, Co Waterford. Her father was the county librarian and her mother a chronic invalid. She portrays the strain that her mother's increasing illness had on the family.

      Wheels within Wheels
    • 2003

      Through the Embers of Chaos

      Balkan Journeys

      • 388pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      While bicycling hundreds of miles through beautiful yet tragically depopulated regions of Albania and the former Yugoslavia, Dervla stayed with families forcibly uprooted, their lives devastated by murder and pillage. Conversations revealed the griefs and confusions of ordinary people, many of whom were extraordinarily brave and resilient during the 'decade of decay'. Throughout her travels, Dervla tries to make sense of the confusing history and politics of the area. Through the Embers of Chaos is an extraordinary achievement; it describes a journey that demanded the greatest emotional and physical stamina (not least as she was attacked and robbed three times in Albania). The result is a truly unusual view on the Balkan countryside.

      Through the Embers of Chaos
    • 1995

      Where the Indus is Young

      • 272pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      Dervla Murphy and her six-year-old daughter walked into the Karakorum mountains in the heart of the western Himalayas and along the perilous Indus Gorge. Accompanied by only a gallant polo pony, they endured conditions that tested their limits of ingenuity, fortitude and courage and, remarkably, with little loss of good humour. This is their story.

      Where the Indus is Young
    • 1995

      Die irische Autorin erzählt in ihrem Tagebuch, wie sie zusammen mit ihrer damals sechsjährigen Tochter Rachel den Winter 1974/75 in Baltistan, einer von Pakistan verwalteten Hochgebirgsregion verbrachte.

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