LONGLISTED FOR THE ORWELL PRIZE 2017` This is travel writing at its best.` Katherine Norbury, Observer An Observer Book of the Year His father Brian taught Rory Stewart how to walk, & walked with him on journeys from Iran to Malaysia. Now they have chosen to do their final walk together along `the Marches`
- the frontier that divides their two countries, Scotland & Engl&. Brian, a ninety-year-old former colonial official & intelligence officer, arrives in Newcastle from Scotland dressed in tartan & carrying a draft of his new book You Know More Chinese Than You Think. Rory comes from his home in the Lake District, carrying a Punjabi fighting stick which he used when walking across Afghanistan. On their six-hundred-mile, thirty-day journey
- with Rory on foot, & his father `ambushing` him by car
- the pair relive Scottish dances, reflect on Burmese honey-bears, & on the loss of human presence in the British landscape. On mountain ridges & in housing estates they uncover a forgotten country crushed between England & Scotland: the Middlel&. They cross upland valleys which once held forgotten peoples & languages
- still preserved in sixth-century lullabies & sixteenth-century ballads. The surreal tragedy of Hadrian`s Wall forces them to re-evaluate their own experiences in the Iraq & Vietnam wars. The wild places of the uplands reveal abandoned monasteries, border castles, secret military test sites & newly created wetlands. They discover unsettling modern lives, lodged in an ancient l&. Their odyssey develops into a history of nationhood, an anatomy of the landscape, a chronicle of contemporary Britain & an exuberant encounter between a father & a son. & as the journey deepens, & the end approaches, Brian & Rory fight to match, step by step, modern voices, nationalisms & contemporary settlements to the natural beauty of the Marches, & a fierce absorption in tradition in their own unconventional lives.