This was the strangest most satisfying book I've ever had the pleasure to experience.
It was narrated so very well by Anthony Heald. His voice kept me coming back to the story especially when I was on the verge of giving up on it after I had put it down for a number of days.
It was a complicated novel. The very first lines established that our narrator (the actual author in this case) admits that he's making all this up, except for the parts that are true. It's not often I've experienced the breaking of the fourth wall in a novel. I certainly enjoyed it here.
The point of view changes from Ferry teaching a class, to the story of a car crash and how he becomes involved in it and then obsessed by it. The genres also evolve from a literary fiction of his obsession and the effect is has on his relationships and professional life, to an investigative crime fiction.
Through it all there are interludes of actual travel writing, which I enjoyed very much for it's observations of people.
Flipping through all of these "realities" sometimes left me confused, but I just allowed the narration to continue and let it wash over me. I had faith that I would be able to pick up the threads later on.
Peter Ferry is an accomplished and very skilled writer. To learn this was his debut novel astounded me. I was left in awe of his skill to pull off such a complex story structure.
A surprise of a book.
Recommended for sure.
Might I suggest a much more thoughtful review of the book? If you find yourself unconvinced by me to pick up Travel Writing try, reading this review from the good folks at Bloom.
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