Extract: The Burning Leg | reviews, news & interviews
Extract: The Burning Leg
Extract: The Burning Leg
An exploration of the whys and wherefores of walking in fiction
Thursday, 25 March 2010
Tess takes a hike: Gemma Arturton in the BBC adaptation of Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Walkers, like lovers of literature, are driven by the urge to explore, and writers have blessed their fictional characters with itchy feet since the earliest of narratives. Walks found in novels, short stories and even drama can have a multitude of meanings. The Burning Leg: Walking Scenes from Classic Fiction (Hesperus Press) collects extracts from Dickens and Dostoevsky, Proust and Poe, Kipling, Kafka and many more to show imaginations time and again set in motion by the simple act of walking. The following introduction is by the anthology's editor, Duncan Minshull
Walkers, like lovers of literature, are driven by the urge to explore, and writers have blessed their fictional characters with itchy feet since the earliest of narratives. Walks found in novels, short stories and even drama can have a multitude of meanings. The Burning Leg: Walking Scenes from Classic Fiction (Hesperus Press) collects extracts from Dickens and Dostoevsky, Proust and Poe, Kipling, Kafka and many more to show imaginations time and again set in motion by the simple act of walking. The following introduction is by the anthology's editor, Duncan Minshull
When Millamant says in The Way of the World, 'I nauseate walking,' she could be saying, ‘I nauseate walkers’ too
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