Through the centuries, people from all walks of life have heard the siren call of a pilgrimage, the lure to journey away from the familiar in search of understanding. But is a pilgrimage even possible these days for city-dwellers enmeshed in the pressures ofwork and familylife? Or is there a way to be a pilgrim without leaving one s life behind? James Attlee answers these questions with "Isolarion," a thoughtful, streetwise, and personal account of his pilgrimage to a place he thought he already knew the Cowley Road in Oxford, right outside his door. "Isolarion" takes its title from a...
Through the centuries, people from all walks of life have heard the siren call of a pilgrimage, the lure to journey away from the familiar in searc...
"Nobody who has not taken one can imagine the beauty of a walk through Rome by full moon," wrote Goethe in 1787. Sadly, the imagination is all we have today: in Rome, as in every other modern city, moonlight has been banished, replaced by the twenty-four-hour glow of streetlights in a world that never sleeps. Moonlight, for most of us, is no more.
So James Attlee set out to find it. Nocturne is the record of that journey, a traveler's tale that takes readers on a dazzling nighttime trek that ranges across continents, from prehistory to the present, and through both the physical...
"Nobody who has not taken one can imagine the beauty of a walk through Rome by full moon," wrote Goethe in 1787. Sadly, the imagination is all we h...