Synopses & Reviews
In Patagonia, Bruce Chatwin's tale of a journey from Buenos Aires to Tierra del Fuego, is one of the most popular travel books of all time and has fostered extraordinary interest in this remote region at the southern tip of South America, the "Uttermost End of the World". Rosemary Goring's account, Return to Patagonia, followed a similar itinerary to Bruce Chatwin, but where he was travelling through terra incognita she was returning to the land of her childhood. She homes in on Puerto San Julian and on the nearby estancia (ranch) where she spent her early years. Return to Patagonia includes both childhood memories of the farm community and the recollections of her family who owned and managed it for more than 80 years. It also breaks new ground. While much has been written about the Welsh settlement at Trelew in Argentine Patagonia, there is little about the English and Scottish sheep farmers who crossed from the Falkland Islands to colonize the barren mainland further south. The book, which includes an account of an earlier visit to the Falklands, explores the links between Patagonia and its neighbouring islands. Having met people who were caught up on both sides in the Falklands War, Rosemary Goring is able to offer another perspective on the conflict.
Synopsis
Detailing a fascinating autobiographical account of the author's return to her childhood home on an Argentinian farm, this recollection also includes a portrait of her earlier visit to the Falklands as well as an exploration of the links between Patagonia and its neighboring islands. Having met people who were caught up on both sides in the Falklands War, this striking record offers another perspective of the conflict through the firsthand experience of the narrator.
About the Author
Rosemary Goring was born in Buenos Aires and educated at Rodean and Girton College, Cambridge. A former teacher, she is the author of Something More Than Gold: A European View of Brotherhood of the Cross and the Star.