A Way to See the World: From Texas to Transylvania with a Maverick Traveler

Thomas Swick
The Lyons Press (2005)
ISBN 1592281702
Reviewed by Olivera Baumgartner-Jackson for Reader Views (1/07)

Being professionally involved with the travel industry for years, I’ve met my share of travelers and my share of tourists. Same thing applies to travel writing – some writers are tourists, some are travelers. Thomas Swick is without a doubt a traveler. His “A Way to See the World” is subtitled “From Texas to Transylvania with a Maverick Traveler” which immediately gives you an inkling on the scope of his writing. What the title does not convey is how deeply Mr. Swick explored every place described within this marvelous book. He delves into the usual topics of history, landscape and culture; and while all of those are great reading, in my opinion he truly excels when describing the people and their everyday lives.

No matter where his travels take him, be it to Cuba on a cultural exchange, to the Croatian seaside, a carnival in Trinidad or the one in Mobile, Alabama, a dinner with cartoonists in Russia, a baseball game in Chicago, the last leg of Oregon trail or searching for Hungarians in Transylvania, Thomas Swicks discovers the people and talks to them. More importantly, he lets them talk when they so desire. And he listens real well. His explanations are brief and only added when necessary. He discovers real people everywhere he goes, even on board of a cruise ship and in a tennis tournament in Miami.

His observations are keen and detailed and he captures the spirit of each place wonderfully well. Take, for example, this brief scene during the carnival in Trinidad:  “At nine the next morning – five hours after the soca stopped – eight middle-aged Germans sat eating fried eggs and tomatoes on the terrace.  ‘Winston, what time is it?’ one of them asked the manager.  ‘Time? I don’t know. It’s carnival.’  Then Winston went and put on some calypso.”

Or this absolutely brilliant description of Americans:  “Restlessness is in our genes. It shows itself in everything from our national literature – ‘Moby Dick,’ ‘Huckleberry Finn,’ ‘On the Road’ – to the short life of the average address book. […] It seems no coincidence that our largest export company is Boeing. From a historical perspective, no other country could have beaten us to the moon. If, as is said, England is people and France a civilization, the United States is an experiment in perpetual motion.”

Each of his stories in “A Way to See the World” is different and every single one is wonderful reading. Take them with you on your next trip, keep them in your car for when you have to wait somewhere or devour a whole book in one sitting when you are too broke or too busy to get on the road yourself – in each and every case they will open your eyes to how life-changing, exhilarating and wonderful travel could and should be.

Make comment on weblog