James Fenton is the right man in the wrong place in dangerous times. This journalist, poet, and critic is almost always at the center of a revolution. Fenton was one of the last journalists in Saigon, and his reporting from the abandoned American embassy, "where the looting had just begun," is unlike any Vietnam coverage you've ever read. "Some people gave me suspicious looks; I was after all the only one there with a white face--so I began to do a little looting myself . . . .Two things I could not take were reproduction of an 1873 map of Hanoi and a framed quotation by Lawrence of Arabia, which read 'Better to let them do it imperfectly than do it perfectly yourself, for it is their country, their way, and your time is short.'" Reporting from war-ravaged Cambodia, Fenton lived for a while in a monastery, where the monks, certain he was a CIA agent, were fixated with his bout of constipation. In "The Snap Revolution," Fenton chronicles Corazon Aquino's assumption of power in the Philippines, from a vantage point so close "I could even tell you what perfume Imelda Marcos was wearing." Fenton's most recent posting is Korea, where he reports, in his inimitable fashion, on the recent riots and election in that complex country on the brink of civil convulsion. All the Wrong Places is a visceral and unforgettable view from the Pacific Rim.
A street-level view of world hot-spots of the '70s and '80s
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Have to hand it to Fenton. He manages to be at the right place at the right time: on the streets of Saigon the day it fell; raiding Imelda Marcos' private quarters just after she and her husband fled the Phillipines, and making off with a monogrammed bath towel for proof. Not just about what happened, but what it felt like to be there, both to Fenton and the people around him. Subjective? Maybe. But some of things he saw and wrote about are never going to make the mainstream history books. An entertaining read, and a good adjunct to more scholarly books about the fall of Vietnam, the end of the Marcos regime in the Phillipines, and a little-known (in the U.S.) revolt against the authoritarian regime in Korea. Just a point of information: in the memorably humorous travel memoir "Into the Heart of Borneo," author Redmond O'Hanlon recounts his trip to the Borneo outback with his friend James Fenton -- the same James Fenton who wrote "All the Wrong Places."
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