#07 A GOOD BOOK
+ Maps take you places even if you're stuck at home, and Judith Schalansky's Pocket Atlas of Remote Islands: Fifty Islands I Have Not Visited and Never Will takes you further than most. Shalansky grew up behind the iron curtain in East Germany and used maps as a release from her very real geographic confinement. Her atlas features 50 remote islands from around the world, none of which is more than a few miles across. Each map is paired with a short anecdote about the island. Many are whimsical, some are serious, others humorous. Together they form something of a geographic cabinet of curiosities. The places are real and the author promises all the information is true, but I still walked away from this one with the best kind of, "I wonder..." in my head. There are times for encyclopedic facts, but this is not one of them. Instead, listen to the stories and let your imagination take over.
"Anyone who opens an atlas wants everything at once, without limits - the whole world. This longing will always be great, far greater than any satisfaction to be had by attaining what is desired. Give me an atlas over a guidebook any day. There is no more poetic book in the world." |