All at Sea: Another Side of Paradise
By (Author) Julian Sayarer
Quercus Publishing
Arcadia Books
2nd November 2017
2nd November 2017
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Travel and holiday guides
Indigenous peoples
Memoirs
Travel writing
Climate change
Hospitality and service industries
Paperback
254
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 16mm
220g
"Sayarer is a precise and passionate writer . . . The vast energy of his commitment to discover, observe and communicate makes for engrossing, often incandescent prose. We need writers who will go all the way for a story, and tell it with fire. Sayarer is a marvellous example" HORATIO CLARE
On the small island of Surin, near the naval border of Thailand and Myanmar, an indigenous people known as Moken 'sea gypsies' struggle to maintain the same timeless existence as their ancestors. As real estate developers, oil exploration and industrial tourism reshape the waters they call home, Sayarer receives a mysterious offer from an idealistic Luxembourger determined to tell a tale of the Moken on film, and in search of a writer to detail the efforts of his motley crew. Events unfold in a reality strangely different to that version captured by the lens. In the quest for indigenous wisdom, cameras and tripods clutter bamboo huts, while fishing trips and dives are staged beneath the waves. With the quest for paradise seeming ever more artificial, award-winning author, Julian Sayarer instead begins listening to the stories of Laurie, an old sailor, with a life on the water behind him, and in whose ship the crew sail out into the Andaman Sea.`On The Road for the Occupy generation' Open Democracy; `A brilliantly thoughtful writer' Sara Wheeler
JULIAN SAYARER cycled a half dozen times across Europe to his second nation of Turkey before before breaking a world record for a circumnavigation by bicycle - riding 18,049 miles through 20 countries in 169 days. He is the winner of the Stanford Dolman Travel Writing Award for Interstate (2016), an account of hitchhiking through middle America, and is the author of Messengers (2016), All at Sea (2017), Fifty Miles Wide (2020) and Iberia (2021). Julian combines a background in political science to create a critically acclaimed travel writing style - politics at roadsides. In this 12mph view of the world in passing, he uses human stories and journeys to document global issues for a broad audience. His writing has appeared in the London Review of Books, the Guardian, Aeon Magazine, among others, and in numerous cycling publications.