“Mark
Twain was a great traveler and he wrote three or four great travel books. I
wouldn't say that I'm a travel novelist but rather a novelist who travels - and
who uses travel as a background for finding stories of places.”
– Paul Theroux
Born on this date in 1941, Theroux - like Twain - is both an accomplished travel writer AND novelist. His
best-known works are The Great Railway Bazaar and The Mosquito Coast,
which was adapted into a popular movie by the same name. Apple TV is now in production on a new
10-part series based on the book.
Winner of the prestigious James Tait
Black Memorial Prize for The Mosquito
Coast, he also has earned numerous other writing awards and honors
including the Royal Geographic Society’s Patron Medal (in 2015) and the Whitbread
Prize for Best Novel for Picture Palace
in 1978. All told, he has authored
nearly 80 books, including a number of novels – such as Saint Jack, Half-Moon Street
and The Chinese Box –
adapted into feature films.
To Theroux, the whole world is a topic for a book. “Everything is
fiction,” he said. “You only have your
own life to work with in the way that a biographer only has the letters and
journals to work with.” As for his
travel writing, that’s easy.
“The job of the travel writer is to
go far and wide, to make voluminous notes, to tell the truth.”
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