Sliced Iguana: Travels in Mexico
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Product Description
Through her narrative Isabella Tree threads the brightly coloured history of Mexico and tells the stories of the people that have defined its fractured past and will shape its future - kings and conquistadors, politicians and rebels, shamans and priests, mestizos and indigenous Indians. This is a story of Mexico like no other, capturing the essence of its psyche and illuminating the struggles and hopes of a people and a country on the cusp of change.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #152767 in Books
- Published on: 2008-02-15
- Released on: 2008-03-04
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 336 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Amazon.co.uk
When future generations assess which foreign countries have had the greatest influence on prominent writers in the 20th century, Mexico is certain to figure prominently. Graham Greene, Jack Kerouac, Malcolm Lowry, Gabriela Mistral and Octavio Paz all found the contradictions that thrive in Mexico rich food for their creative imaginations. Yet, in spite of the fact that it is the world's 14th biggest country, and possesses an immense ethnic diversity, most of us who have never been there tend to think of Mexico as one, more or less uniform, place.
In Sliced Iguana acclaimed travel writer Isabella Tree sets out to put the record straight. Embarking on a series of journeys to different corners of the country, she experiences the many different faces of the patchwork: eating Castañeda's famous peyote cactus with the Huichol people, visiting the rebellious Indians of Chiapas, and then partying in a region which stands against the overbearing Latin machismo--Juchitán, where over two thirds of the men are transvestites.
Tree writes with an impressive erudition about the conquistadors and the indigenous peoples whose lives they shattered forever. She has a connoisseur's eye for colonial architecture, and her observations are often perceptive and thought-provoking. Although the dialogue between herself and the people she meets is a little thin, her writing is sharp and illuminating, and this is likely to be among the best travel books published this year. --Toby Green
Review
"Reading Sliced Iguana convinced me that I was actually in Mexico and the author’s relaxed, evocative style gave the country an exciting and endearing appeal. This book is a readable, informative and humorous account of a country that is little-known by its own people and even less by the outside world." Bookseller’s Choice
"Here is a book that goes some way towards throwing light on Mexico’s multicultural mix and its rich and bloody history… It’s clear she’s having enormous fun, but she is also attempting something serious here: to engage with and understand something of Mexico’s indigenous culture and its survival into the 21st century. Tree's second travel book confirms the promise of Islands in the Clouds: she is an accomplished traveller and a fresh and rewarding writer." Anthony Sattin, Book of the Week, The Sunday Times
"She has an array of qualities that fit her for writing about wild and remote places; insight, sympathy, courage, a lucid and colourful fluency, humour that makes many of her pages hilarious." Patrick Leigh Fermor
"One of the most accomplished travel writers to appear on the horizon for many years." Eric Newby
"Sliced Iguana is a gem of a book which shines in every direction; it is heartfelt and penetrating, poignant and touched throughout by irresistible humour. But the author's greatest achievement is to have plunged fearlessly beneath the surface of the culture it explores to produce a work that is truly relevant to our time." Jason Elliot
"Isabella Tree's rare amd exciting talent is taking travel writing into a new dimension." Alexander Frater
"Wry, perceptive, intelligent and irreverently funny… the best of travel writing. Wonderfully successful." The Times Literary Supplement
"Everything about Isabella Tree’s [Sliced Iguana] is as bright and fresh as a desert dawn. Wide-eyed and sharp-penned, she explores not the backwater myth but a fast-evolving semi-continent… Tree mixes her erudition with ebullience. Such a relief to meet a travel writer who actually has fun." Independent
"Masterly and moving… Sliced Iguana combines solid factual foundations with real insight and is an honourable contribution to the literature of this most baffling and beguiling of countries." Katie Hickman, Literary Review
"Her talent for picking apart a country before sewing it back together is remarkable. Brilliant, funny, gripping, sensitive. The warmth and wit of Sliced Iguana will ensure that Mexico is never underestimated by gringos again." The Times
"An excellent, highly readable account of this huge, fascinating country. Tree deftly intercuts her personal experience with a fluent precis of the region's tragic past and its cultural origins. Her readings of Mesoamerican civilisation and history are unerringly secure." The Guardian
"I was as hooked as if I'd been reading fiction. The magic of Tree's writing is that she takes us with her on the journey. By the end of her story, I was ready to book my plane ticket." Traveller
"Entertaining, erudite... with infectious enthusiasm. Sliced Iguana makes an intriguing introduction to the world of the indigenous people of Mexico." Daily Telegraph
"A fine example of what travel writing can achieve when it’s done well. With a sense of wonder and excitement [and] packed with exotica, crammed with reflections and insights, Sliced Iguana shows just how much more there is to Mexico than tequila and chillies." Daily Mail
"Tree writes with an impressive erudition about the conquistadors and the indigenous peoples whose lives they shattered forever. She has a connoisseur's eye for colonial architecture, and her observations are perceptive and thought-provoking. Her writing is sharp and illuminating, and this is likely to be among the best travel books published this year." Toby Green
"The author's love of Mexico is there for all to see." The Express
The Express, June 23, 2001
The author's love of Mexico is there for all to see
