Dear Ms. Gellhorn,
I am a college student, and my class and I just finished
reading your memoir, Travels with Myself
and Another. It was really
interesting to learn about your life and the people you met. I find it funny that such a prominent and
established journalist such as yourself would have a poor memory. I guess that I have always assumed that
journalists remember in great detail all of the places they have been to and
the things they have written about, but it is normal to forget details as time
continues.
In your book you describe several trips that you take,
describing them as “horror journeys”. Do
you have a favorite horror journey? In
our class we have discussed that sometimes the trips that go awfully, entirely
awry can create fun memories, but you still seem to describe your horror
journeys in a negative light. Do you
think you will remember these trips more fondly later in your life? Or will your negative recollections of these
continue forever?
Though you state that you “never thought of writing about
travel,” you wrote this book. Were you
happy with the way that it turned out? I
always feel as if I am forgetting something when I tell a story. I’m sure that read over your memoir and
edited it many times, but do you ever wish you had included something that you
did not? Or is there something you wish
you had not included? As someone who is
often very critical of myself, I wonder how authors perceive their own memoirs,
especially those that they originally never thought they would write.
Thank you for sharing your experiences in this memoir and
thank you for all of the great journalism works that you did.
Best,
Selby Sturzenegger
Dear Ms. Gellhorn,
ReplyDeleteTo add on to what Selby said, I'm intrigued by your "horror stories." You recall an earlier time "when you confidently expected everything to go well instead of thinking it a miracle if everything doesn't go wrong," which makes me wonder, are horror journeys a newer phenomenon? How has the changing ease of travel made horror stories more likely? You also articulate a difference between yourself and heroic, great travelers, who are "unequalled professionals." Unlike them, you have experienced "moments of rancour." Do you mean to say that they have not experienced horror stories? So could you also argue that horror stories are less about the changing times and more a result of your self-proclaimed amateur travelers status? In other words, I'm interested in what aspect you think causes horror stories: experience or the changing nature of travel?
Thank you for your wonderful and honest book.
Best,
Devon Burger