Imagine a City: A Pilot's Journey Across the Urban World

Imagine a City: A Pilot's Journey Across the Urban World

  • Downloads:6417
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-07-11 10:19:39
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Mark Vanhoenacker
  • ISBN:B09L9MFWWN
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

A love letter to the cities of the world, from the airline pilot-author of Skyfaring

Ever since he was a boy growing up in Pittsfield, in western Massachusetts, Mark Vanhoenacker has been fascinated by cities: their bright lights, hustle and bustle, and dazzling skylines, and the endless opportunities they offer for personal discovery and reinvention。 Now, as an adult, he travels the world as a commercial airline pilot, visiting every city he dreamed about as a child and many, many more。 The way he experiences these metropolises--in 24- to 72-hour layovers, sometimes twice in one week and then not at all for months or even years--is unlike that of any ordinary traveler, and gives him an utterly unique perspective on what makes a city a city。 In this hybrid work of travelogue and memoir, Vanhoenacker celebrates the cities he has come to know over the years, from Pittsburgh to Cape Town, and from Tokyo to Jeddah--through the lens of his small hometown。 In chapters that explore individual facets of city identity--their geography, their poems, their weather--he shows us with fresh eyes the man-made wonders that billions of us call home。

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Reviews

Jessica

Mark Vanhoenacker has a really lyrical, evocative way of writing。 I adored Skyfaring: A Journey with a Pilot, and some of the magic of that book can be found here as well。 There's a long section in the middle about Kuwait, and it was so immersive and fascinating that I was ready to hop on a plane to see Kuwait City for myself (deadly heat and all)。 Likewise, the chapter about Cape Town and the gorgeous passages about the author's obsession with the color blue (one I share to a certain extent) tr Mark Vanhoenacker has a really lyrical, evocative way of writing。 I adored Skyfaring: A Journey with a Pilot, and some of the magic of that book can be found here as well。 There's a long section in the middle about Kuwait, and it was so immersive and fascinating that I was ready to hop on a plane to see Kuwait City for myself (deadly heat and all)。 Likewise, the chapter about Cape Town and the gorgeous passages about the author's obsession with the color blue (one I share to a certain extent) transported me and sparked an intense Fernweh> - even though I was actually already far from home when I read them。 The travel bug can apparently hit even you're already traveling。This book is much more of a personal memoir than his previous one, and he also writes with gentle affection about his hometown of Pittsfield and all the beauties and difficulties of growing up there。 My problem is that I'm very susceptible to melancholy, so these parts made me quite pensive and often straight-up sad。 I wasn't entirely emotionally prepared for this, so I didn't totally enjoy the book as much as I thought I would。 This is not at all a criticism of the book itself, though, which is lovely。 I will continue to read anything that Mark Vanhoenacker writes。 。。。more

D

Absolutely enchanting。 The Times reviewer wrote: ‘a memoir wrapped within a scholarly travel book。。。dreamy and erudite。。。a most likeable, warm-hearted narrator with an original world view’。 It is just marvellous。 (And I'm not biased just because I make an appearance☺️) Absolutely enchanting。 The Times reviewer wrote: ‘a memoir wrapped within a scholarly travel book。。。dreamy and erudite。。。a most likeable, warm-hearted narrator with an original world view’。 It is just marvellous。 (And I'm not biased just because I make an appearance☺️) 。。。more