Blending classic travel writing with passionate observations on the deeper political and social issues of the time, Robert Byron writes with uncanny prescience of the eventual horrors of the Soviet Union and the downfall of the Raj.
Over the course of several months during 1931 and 1932, Robert Byron journeyed to three countries teetering on the brink of change. In Russia, which was stricken by famine, Lenin had just died, Stalin's dictatorship was in its infancy and the Great Terror was yet to begin.
Having taken the first commercial flight to India, which took a week, Byron was thrown into the tumultuous last years of the British Raj. Gandhi was imprisoned, while rioting and clashes between Hindus and Muslims had become commonplace.
Finally Byron entered Tibet, the forbidden country. Exploring the Land of Snows, he saw Tibet as it was when the then Dalai Lama was still ensconced in the Potala Palace, twenty years before China's invasion.
As a piece of travel literature, First Russia, Then Tibet is compelling and beautifully written. As a portrait of these countries in the 1930s, it is invaluable. Ultimately, it illuminates the constant quest for meaning that underscored Robert Byron's life and travels.
Robert Byron was one of the twentieth century's greatest travel writers as well as a noted art critic and historian. Byron's The Road to Oxiana is considered by many to be the first example of great travel writing. He also wrote Europe in the Looking Glass, The Byzantine Achievement and The Station. He died in 1941, at the age of 35, when the ship on which he was travelling was torpedoed by a German U-Boat in the Atlantic.
The Traveller's Confession
PART I: RUSSIA
I. The New Jerusalem
II. Creed and Observance
III The Russian Aesthetic
IV. Moscow
V. Leningrad
VI. Veliki Novgorodm
VII. Early Russian Painting
VIII. Yaroslavl and Sergievo
IX. The Ukraine
PART II: TIBET
I. The Air Mail
II. The Desert Lands
III. Anglo-Himalaya
IV. Into Tibet
V. The Plains
VI. The Pleasures of Gyantse
VII. Lunching Out
VIII. Winter Comes Early
IX. A Tibetan Pilgrimage