Slowly Down the Ganges

Slowly Down the Ganges
Author: Eric Newby
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 298
Release: 1983
Genre: Ganges River (India and Bangladesh)
ISBN: 9780330280235

Eric Newby has never been bedeviled by practicality. Hence this 1,200-mile journey down the Ganges River, which the author undertook in 1963 in the company of his wife and an ever-changing crew of Indian retainers. What moved him to take the trip? Partly it was the memory of his military service in India more than two decades before. And as he confesses, Newby has a lifelong and perhaps congenital love of rivers: "I like exploring them. I like the way in which they grow deeper and wider and dirtier but always, however dirty they become, managing to retain some of the beauty with which they were born." Few rivers grow quite as dirty as the Ganges, which also goes by such nicknames as Atula ("Peerless"), Savitri ("Stimulator"), and Bhinna-brahmanda-darpini ("Taking pride in the broken egg of Brahma"). And few accounts of this mighty waterway could possibly be as acute and hilarious as Slowly down the Ganges, which Newby first published in 1966.

A Small Place in Italy

A Small Place in Italy
Author: Eric Newby
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2013-02-21
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 0007508158

This book is a lush and beautiful memoir of a very special house and a superb recreation of a bygone era.

Around the World in 80 Years

Around the World in 80 Years
Author: Eric Newby
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 211
Release: 2013-02-21
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 0007404190

An illustrated ebook documenting the hugely varied and always entertaining career of one of Britain’s best-loved travel writers.

Along the Ganges

Along the Ganges
Author: Ilija Trojanow
Publisher: Armchair Traveller
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011-03-10
Genre: Ganges River Valley (India and Bangladesh)
ISBN: 9781906598914

"A lyrical homage to India's holiest, moodiest, foulest river...Trojanow is the perfect mix of insider and outsider... It is a treasure of a book, a must-have for anyone spending time on the Ganges and wanting to get to know her better."- Financial Times "Funny, shocking, and always interesting."- The Spectator Along the Ganges was voted one of the greatest travel books of all time by Conde Nast Traveler by a jury including Gore Vidal and Paul Theroux.The River Ganges has a thousand names, and Hindu priests thought it a sin to call her a river at all. She is a goddess, the source of the world. Her waters are holy, healing, and still sold to Hindus the world over. Ilija Tojanow, an international best-selling author, traveled along the Ganges from the source, where it breaks free from the ice in the Himalayas, to the great cities. Along the way he visited the great Hindu festivals and talked to those who warn of ecological disaster caused bygigantic dams. This colorful travelogue describes a country caught between ancient traditions and astonishing modernity, and the holy river that crosses it for hundreds of miles. Ilija Trojanow is the author Mumbai to Mecca (Haus Publishing) and the best-selling novel The Collector of Worlds, for which he was awarded the Leipzig Book Fair Prize.

Round Ireland in Low Gear

Round Ireland in Low Gear
Author: Eric Newby
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 386
Release: 2013-02-21
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 0007508204

'You've had some pretty crazy ideas in your life, Newby, but this is the craziest.' Grandmother Wanda Newby was exasperated after continuous rain, snow, and gales that knocked from her bike. Twice.

Daughter of the Ganges

Daughter of the Ganges
Author: Asha Miró
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2006
Genre: Adoptees
ISBN: 0743286723

Adopted from India when she was six and raised in Spain, the author takes a heart-wrenching trip back to India as an adult to uncover her roots and discover a sister she never knew.

Ganges Water Machine

Ganges Water Machine
Author: Anthony Acciavatti
Publisher: ORO Applied Research + Design
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780982622612

Beyond the dense urbanism of Mumbai (Bombay) or the IT centers of Bangalore and Hyderabad lies the Ganges River basin--today home to over one-quarter of India's billion-plus population--a space historically defined by a mythological constellation of terrestrial sites imbued with celestial significance. Not only is it one of the most densely populated river basins in the world, but it also undergoes dramatic physical changes with the onslaught of the wet monsoon, where over one-meter of rainfall occurs in the span of three months. This book focuses on the intersection of these two observations. It is an atlas of built and unbuilt projects designed to transform the river into a giant water machine. Since the middle of the nineteenth century, this mythical watercourse has functioned as a laboratory to test and build a new civilization around the culture of water. Jointly authored by people and nature, the Ganges River is today a monstrous water machine in which the entire basin became a workshop of human-made experience, defined by a hydrological system best described as a supersurface: a surface engineered from the scale of the soil to the scale of the nation. Everything from diffuse urban projects and green revolutions to colossal public works programs and architectural transformations constitute the genesis of the Ganges Water Machine. Whether to thwart massive peasant uprisings or to redirect monsoonal rains to productive ends, never before has a river that inspired the realization of unbelievable architectural and infrastructural projects received as little scrutiny as the Ganges river basin. Reaching through the very heart of some of India s most densely populated cities, small towns, industrial zones, sacred sites, and mountainous forests, Ganges Water Machine by Anthony Acciavatti, composed of eight years of field and archival research, explores and theorizes the people and infrastructures that shaped this territory. Ganges Water Machine is an atlas of the enterprise to make the Ganges River basin into a highly engineered landscape: it reveals the narratives and explanations that allowed engineers and planners to realize fantasies previously only imaginable on paper or in myth.

Love and War in the Apennines

Love and War in the Apennines
Author: Eric Newby
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2010
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0007367899

In 1943, Eric Newby escaped from the Italian prison camp in which he had been held for a year. Evading the advancing German army, he was sheltered by an informal network of Italian peasants. Love and War in the Apennines is Newby's tribute to these selfless and courageous people and their bleak and unchanging way of life. Of the cast of idiosyncratic characters, most notable was the beautiful local girl on a bike who would teach him the language, and eventually help him escape. Two years later they were married and would spend the rest of their lives as co-adventurers. Part travelogue, part escape story and part romance, this is a mesmerising account of wisdom, courage, humour, adventure and above all, love from the man who would become one of Britain's best-loved literary adventurers.

Grand Adventures

Grand Adventures
Author: Alastair Humphreys
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 559
Release: 2016-03-24
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 0008131945

‘Enthusiastic, pleasingly madcap’ Geographical Adventure – something that’s new and exhilarating, outside your comfort zone. Adventures change you and how you see the world, and all you need is an open mind, bags of enthusiasm and boundless curiosity. Recommended for viewing on a colour tablet.