CHAOS, GLOOM, CONFUSIONwhat a great time to be a travel writer. Last
year a crop of daring, even heedless authors returned from unflinching tours
of the world's sore spots, proving once again that no one gets a better grip
on the planet than the long- suffering, far-wandering witness with a pen.
For London-based Jason Elliot, the "whims and goals and prejudices" of travel
are turned to unexpected shapes by the hard lathe of Iran. In Mirrors of
the Unseen: Journeys in Iran (St. Martin's, $27), he weaves three years
of wanderingthrough the ruins of Persepolis, the stony mountains of the
Assassinsinto an embrace of Persian culture and grudging respect for the
Iranian revolution that cuts past clichés of mad mullahs and rave parties.
It's a more pacific account than his superior 1999 debut, An Unexpected
Light, a sumptuous tale of summer breaks in the eighties spent fighting
with the Afghan resistance (or at least raiding orchards in mujahedeen costume).
But in Iran the Farsi-fluent Elliot, 41, renders transparent a civilization
that somehow endures earthquakes, wars, and political storms.
Revolution's aftermath is the theme for Jeffrey Tayler, 45, whose River
of No Reprieve: Descending Siberia's Waterway of Exile, Death, and Destiny (Houghton
Mifflin, $24) returns the Atlantic Monthly correspondent to his adopted
home and first love, the "exacting taskmaster" of rural Russia. For no more
reason than that "the Lena [River] came to mind," Tayler travels to Siberia
and, with an amply stocked raft and outboard motor, descends 2,400 miles down
the isolated river, where a merciless forest swallows the abandoned gulags of
empire. He fends off alcoholic villagers, fascist hooligans, and mosquitoes
the size of golf balls without losing his eloquence. The only explosions are
the nightly "tridents of lightning" breaking over a river where "panes of liquid
silver are speckled with raindrops."
But it was The Prince of the Marshes and Other Occupational Hazards of
a Year in Iraq (Harcourt, $25), a clear-eyed marvel by Scotsman Rory Stewart,
that kept me up all night. Eton boy turned officer of the Black Watch, speaker
of half a dozen languages (but little Arabic), dashing, 33-year-old Stewart
made book-club hearts throb in early 2006 with The Places In Between,
about his stroll through Afghanistan, in winter, weeks after the Taliban's fall.
He was resting up from that trek in 2003 when the Coalition Provisional Authority
called, offering him seemingly limitless funds (the money would later arrive
shrink-wrapped in "million dollar bricks"), a bodyguard detail of six, and 12
months to pacify a province in southern Iraq. Prince is Stewart's diary
of rebuilding schools, clinics, and self-government amid the Machiavellian scheming
and sniper attacks of competing sects, tribes, armies, and egosall of
which he faces with black humor reminiscent of Evelyn Waugh. "Tell you what,
though," a rollerblading British general advises him at one point, "you've got
the plum job. Most fun province in Iraq." Stewart emerges a year later defeated
but unmuddied, convinced that good manners and humility would have gone further
than shock and awe. His province is today aflame, and Stewart recently moved
to Kabul, for the quiet. His books, like those of Elliot and Tayler, prove that
literate and urgent travel writing is alive and well.