Tales from the edge

'The Ends of the Earth' is a collection of essays that document the traveller's experiences in unusual and hard-to-visit places
Tales from the edge
Tales from the edge
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3 min read

The Ends of the Earth is by turns an absorbing book, a well-observed account of many journeys and an informative guide to some unusual and hard-to-visit places. What it is not, is a pleasant read. I would even be willing to bet that the author, an award-winning German foreign correspondent, broadcaster and honorary professor of literature at Humboldt University, would feel insulted if he were ever told that his work was merely amusing or entertaining. His observations have a sharp edge, he prefers creative discomfort to cushioned ease and he often seems to enjoy being disappointed, hurt and disillusioned&mdashwithout apparently being depressed.

The book is a collection of essays that record the traveller&rsquos thoughts, personal encounters and sensory observations as he visits places that might be called terminal points. There&rsquos the Rock of Gibraltar, the Himalaya, the North Pole, the far and desolate reaches of Patagonia, Minsk, Hong Kong and Bombay, amongst many others. Bombay may seem like a strange choice, you might think, until you read the piece. As the reader soon discovers, there are many ways for one&rsquos personal &lsquoEarth&rsquo to end. We begin to see that each of us, sedentary readers safe in our own homes are also, at every moment, sitting at the thresholds of our own existence that any place and any moment can become an &lsquoend&rsquo of one sort or the other. It&rsquos an unnerving realisation but, of course, profoundly true.

The author&rsquos somewhat crabby and unsparing observations are a refreshing change from the politically correct travelogue that avoids any shadow of critique aimed at foreign cultures. Here, for instance, is a fragment of his description of Kathmandu&rsquos central temple complex &ldquoThe beautiful old ladies in their shawls gob out the red juice of the betel nuts onto the ground&mdashjust one more colour&mdashand the beggars keep rattling their empty tin bowls as though trying to prove that hunger really exists.&rdquo Or here, from Cape Town &ldquoThe black workmen on the dumpsters sit and stare at the beach like anthropologists. The white man is inherently comic, and even more so when he is a sunworshipper. A human spatula, a gourmet sublimating himself into a delicacy, by lying, turning and grilling himself in the sun, all the while promising himself beneficial effects from it.&rdquo

The friends Willemsen makes and the conversations he has along the way provide the meat of these essays, even as the locations provide the plates, cutlery and table. Girlfriends make their way into and out of the author&rsquos life with the capriciousness of clouds, announcing their departures with brutal abruptness. One of them says &ldquo&hellip the more I get to know you, the more difficult you become.&rdquo It&rsquos hard to know whether this willingness to share their disapproval of him is honesty or a type of inverted exhibitionism. They are one example of &lsquothe ends of the earth&rsquo &mdashthe ends of his relationships.

A much more extreme example is what the author finds in the depths of a brothel in Bombay a madam who prostitutes her mentally-challenged daughter as a whore-cum-oracle. This passage is reported in heightened prose, like a documentary filmed in black light, with all the actors made up in green fluorescent paint and with unspeakable horrors glistening at the edge of vision. We whip our heads away but it is already too late to wipe away the images left there by the description.

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