In the best tradition of Paul Theroux and J. Maarten Troost, comes
Derek Pugh's torrid tale of Sumbawa, and his ascent of the iconic
volcano Mt. Tambora, whose 1815 eruption did indeed change the world.
Pugh's account of the eruption and its aftermath is masterfully done -
clearly the product of much dogged research through archives,
scientific journals, as well as conversations with Indonesians lasting
long into the steamy night.
Himself a long-time resident of the neighboring Indonesian island of
Lombok, Pugh is a well-qualified tourist who also brings a wry and
rollicking insider's account of local and ex-pat life along the
volcanic chain of islands.
The reader meets a wonderfully diverse cast of characters, from
pre-schooler jockeys, to an ancient princess alone in her decaying
Sultan's palace, to brainless Western surfer dudes and their chicks
who have no clue about the history of the slacker's paradise they've
stumbled upon.
Pugh does a sterling job of filling that gap in Asian travel writing,
as the many-layered dimensions of Sumbawan culture - their strict
Islamism, great friendliness, and intermittent traumas, with the
colossal Tambora looming across every page - unfold to the reader like
layers of volcanic earth from a hidden Pompeii.
Gillen D'Arcy Wood, author of Tambora: The Eruption that Changed the
World (Princeton University Press, 2014)
Read more
Travels to Sumbawa and the Mountain that Changed the World
Product details
ISBN
9781925280012
Published
2019
Publisher
Ebook Alchemy PTY Ltd
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author