Newburyport Public Library

The Silk Road, taking the bus to Pakistan, Bill Porter

Label
The Silk Road, taking the bus to Pakistan, Bill Porter
Language
eng
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The Silk Road
Oclc number
929863216
Responsibility statement
Bill Porter
Sub title
taking the bus to Pakistan
Summary
"To travel upon the Silk Road is to travel through history. Millennia older than California's Camino Real, and perhaps even a few years senior to the roads of the Roman Empire, the Silk Road is a network of routes stretching from delta towns of China all the way to the Mediterranean Sea -- a cultural highway considered to be essential to the development of some of the world's oldest civilizations. It was upon this road that that Chinese silk traveled and was exchanged for incense, precious stones, and gold from India, the Middle East and as far the Mediterranean, contributing to the great tradition of commercial and idea exchange along the way. In the fall of 1992, celebrated translator, writer, and scholar Bill Porter left his home in Hong Kong and decided to travel from China to Pakistan by way of this famous and often treacherous Silk Road. Equipped with a plastic bottle of whiskey, needle-nose pliers, and the companionship of an old friend, Porter embarks upon the journey on the anniversary of Hong Kong's liberation from the Japanese after World War II and concludes in Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, at the end of the monsoon season. Weaving witty travel anecdotes with the history and fantastical mythology of China and the surrounding regions, Porter exposes a world of card-sharks, unheard-of ethnic minorities, terracotta soldiers, nuclear experiments in the desert, emperors falling in love with bathing maidens, monks with miracle tongues, and a giant Buddha relaxing to music played by an invisible band"--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Starting out -- Sian -- Leaving town -- Tienshui -- Lanchou -- Wuwei -- The corridor -- Onward -- Tunhuang -- Hami -- Turfan -- Urumchi -- Yining -- Bayanbulak -- Kucha -- Aksu -- Kashgar -- the road to Tashkorgan -- The Khunjeroab Pass -- Shangri-La -- Gilgit -- Islamabad
Classification
Mapped to

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