From Publishers Weekly
Under the spell of George Gissing's 1901 travelogue By the Ionian Sea, Keahey decided to retrace Gissing's footsteps through southern Italy to record the changes that have marked the region. As practicable as this premise is, it carries a major flaw: although Gissing's work has rarely been out of print since its initial publication and its author is the subject of a quarterly journal, By the Ionian Sea is not widely known. So Keahey repeats large chunks of the original text, giving his own work a secondary-source feel compounded by his recaps of several other prominent books about Italy, such as Carlo Levi's Christ Stopped at Eboli. By placing himself in such illustrious company, Keahey inadvertently drives home the shortcomings of his own account. His prose, though pleasantly conversational, does not match Gissing's, and his overfamiliar observations lack a certain depth (Naples is an exciting but dangerous city; southern Italy bears severe economic problems; etc.). Nonetheless, Keahey distinguishes himself by leading readers on a detailed trip through an area few tourists visit: Calabria, with its scattering of small towns running from mountain to sea. Fans of Gissing may delight in this travel memoir, but Keahey won't create new fans among those unfamiliar with that author. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Veteran newspaperman Keahey, now an editor and reporter for the Salt Lake Tribune, has retraced the footsteps of George Gissing, a Victorian writer (and good friend of Arthur Conan Doyle and H.G. Wells), who traveled to Southern Italy in 1897. His subsequent accounts became a classic in travel literature titled By the Ionian Sea. A hundred years later, Keahey visits such fascinating and historical destinations as Naples, Paola, Cosenza, Sybaris, Taranto, Crotone, Catanzaro, Reggio di Calabria, and Squillace and notes changes and similarities over the past century. The result is an informative and well-researched work on one of the most popular parts of Italy that provides a historical perspective on the area and its people. A detailed chronology, maps, the author's photographs, and a bibliography are all useful, but an index would have been helpful as well. Recommended for public libraries with large collections on travel and Victorian literature.DMelinda Stivers Leach, Precision Editorial Svcs., Wondervu, CO
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.