The Water Road: An Odyssey by Narrowboat Through England's Waterways
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Author : Paul GogartyBinding : PaperbackEAN : 9781861056559Edition : New editionISBN : 1861056559Label : Robson Books LtdManufacturer : Robson Books LtdNumber of pages : 364Publication date : 2003-05-29Publisher : Robson Books LtdTitle : The Water Road: An Odyssey by Narrowboat Through England's WaterwaysLanguages : ArrayNumber of items : 1Studio : Robson Books Ltd
Customer reviews
review by: Big Bry date: 2006-10-11 rating:
An excellent readSo good I read it twice. Contrary to the previous reviewer's opinion on the 'present tense' style of writing, I find that it works extremely well with this book and serves to carry the reader along on the journey with Paul. I have no hesitation in recommending this book to anyone interested in the canla system, narrowboats or travel in general.
review by: date: 2004-09-08 rating:
Excellent read, enjoyable and very hard to put down.My title says it all. I agree with the last review and would suggest you don't even read the one before. I have travelled a lot myself and felt very comfortable with the style of this book. I think that is a fairly good example that it works. A great armchair substitute if you ask me. I'll bet you fancy a canal boat holiday after reading this one, we shall see?
review by: grannybuttons date: 2003-12-19 rating:
Potentially great, could have done with a tough editor.This book could have been one of the waterways classics. He showed an excellent ability to research and prepare and – more importantly – the knack to have interesting things happen to him that reflected the broad experience of the modern waterways user. From being stoned in 'bandit country' (the Wigan Flight) to meeting up with old boating and canal folk on his route, he recorded it well and with flair.
However, one big flaw ruined it for me: he wrote it entirely in the modish 'present tense' of modern magazine interviews. I believe he is a magazine travel writer, so perhaps he can’t shake off a habit.
For example: "...my stomach grumbles and I pull into the skinniest of fish and chip shops in the nearby village of Rodley. Behind the counter a man the size of the Yorkshire Dales serves me haddock and chips, cooked in beef dripping. It is out of this world, and comes accompanied by mushy peas topped with mint sauce. "The Parmesan of the north, that is," the barrel-shaped owner assures me..."
This style might work in the context of short interviews with movie stars and celebs, trying to illustrate a ten-minute PR interview in a hotel suite, but it hangs very wearily on the format of a long travel book, where every darn thing is 'happening right now'. The style leaves no sense of 'memoir' or fond memory of a long journey. In fact, when the journey ends, he makes it feel almost longer ago than the start of the journey.
The extensive interviews and quotations also don't ring quite true, feeling to me like PR quotes that have been made up and shown to the people concerned for approval. (I write a lot of PR quotes for a living myself, which is why I suspect this!)
It's a potentially excellent book, and he covers all the bases of the modern canal age, but for me it's spoiled by want of a stricter editor. Perhaps he can rewrite it for a second edition?
review by: russianlinesman date: 2003-10-02 rating:
The meaning of (p)leasureWhilst we all run around complaining of no free time to do the things we want to do, there is no time to stop and work out if there is a better way. Paul Gogarty has found the time to write a great work by slowing down, and where better on the canals of England where 4 miles an hour speed limits prevail.
If this had been published in the 70s, reading it today you would assume that it's not like that any more. And you'd be wrong. The canals of Britain are reviving slowly but surely and this book sends a very positive message of this revival.
Gogarty has captured the spirit of the waterways, and the people who inhabit them, whilst somehow managing to portray the slowed-down life to be led. The best travel books are those that take you there and make you want to jump straight into his shoes. In this case I have spent the last few days aboard Caroline with Paul and had a wonderful time.
I imagine if you are as far as reading this review, the secret of Britain's canals is no secret, but whoever you are, you should find the time in your hurried lives to sit down for a leisurely read of this great book.
review by: date: 2003-08-06 rating: 
The Water Road an Odysey by Narrowboat through England's Wat
This is a highly evocative book which proves irresistible reading, especially if you find canals themselves just as irresistible. Gogarty is a natural with a penchant for descriptive phrases which leave little to the imagination. It's one of the best books I have read in a long time.
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