The Road to Little Dribbling- Bill Bryson
***1/2/***** Travel
The Road to Little
Dribbling: More Notes from a Small Island
Bill Bryson
About twenty years ago Bill Bryson moved to America, his native
country, after having lived in Britain for more than two decades. At that time,
he decided to travel across Britain in public transports to gather the feel of
the country that he loved dearly. Notes from a Small Island emerged from these
travels. I read this book a couple of years back and noted that ‘It’s the
funniest book I’ve read.’
Bill Bryson returned to Britain after two decades. He
decided to take the roads of the country once again as he wanted to see the
changes that had come about in those years. And also, because his agent wanted
him to write another book on Britain. This time he traveled across
the country from Bognor Regis in south to Cape Wrath in north, which according
to him is the longest straight distance on land from one point to other, the
line never crossing the sea. He did not confine himself to this route-that he
christened ‘Bryson Line’- but zigzags across it, visiting many towns and
villages strewn around, to the east and to the west.
This book is as funny as Notes from a Small Island, if not funnier. I
need not have fretted after reading Notes from a Small Island, that Bryson
has written the funniest book that one can write and he will not better it in
future. The most endearing feature of the book is Bryson’s amazingly delightful
description of English countryside. Bryson has been a past president of CPRE
(Campaign to Protect Rural England) and his sincere and zealous love for
English countryside is amply evident in the book. In the book he writes about
innumerable small villages and towns in UK. He paints a fetching picture of
these quaint old villages with one main street comprising few essential shops: a green grocer, a butcher, an ironmonger and perhaps a book shop. He walks many
treks around almost each place he visits. He writes forthrightly on what he feels is most obnoxious in these places and in a magically charming
prose, praises the place to his heart’s content when he falls in love with its
beauty. He digs up information about buildings, parks, palaces, family
mansions, museums, and people associated with these. He presents these facts in
a most effortless prose replete with his trademark humour. He digresses often
in the narrative as he recounts his encounters with strangers on the roads,
shop assistants, fellow travelers, his opinion on Microsoft’s penchant for updates,
his wife’s obsession with shopping, hair growing in his nose and ears, his
increasing amnesia as he grows old, his experience in restaurants with tardy
service, and myriad such encounters. Each is delivered in his stunningly unique,
mirth and laughter evoking, ridiculously hyperbolic prose, all in a sweet and
suave language. I have visited England a couple of times and have experienced
the magic of English countryside. I feel, if I had read this book before my
visits, I could have planned and extracted more fun from my tour. Bryson does
not spare English character as he mercilessly ridicules it again and again. But
he is equally generous with his praise, which seems genuine and heartfelt.
This is a joyful book. It is what one expects from Bryson. He does not
disappoint you on any page. Other than a wholesome entertainment, book sates a couch-traveler's appetite for English countryside, in addition to
providing many references for promisingly rewarding trips to innumerable
villages and trekking routes in the country. I am sure Bill Bryson has ideas
about many more such books in his incomparably fertile mind. I eagerly await
each and every one the them.
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