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Joshua Humphreys is a writer of comedy novels, plays, ​histories, sarcastic letters to yoga instructors & long and deceptive lists about what he writes...

Travel

The Stones of Athens Tour

April 4, 2020 by Joshua Humphreys Leave a Comment

I’ve been reading the Greeks and about the Greeks for a decade now, but in the last 3 months I’ve intensified that reading in preparation for October’s Stones of Athens Tour.

Corona has thrown a small measure of doubt on the viability of the tour (Greece is in complete lockdown, but October IS 6 months away) but that hasn’t slowed down the reading. On the contrary, moreso than in times of normality—lockdown, quarantine, isolation, pandemic, covid-19—have accelerated the reading even further.

Nietzsche; Burckhardt, Hamilton; Fox; Homer—The Greeks & Greek Culture; The Classical World; The Greek Way; The Idea of Tragedy; The Iliad; The Preplatonic Philosophers!

At least 6 books open at all times, 2 hours devoted to each throughout alternate days. My reading notes now run to 15,000 words. But still I haven’t formed a full picture of who they were and what they meant, or what they might or should mean to us. 

For the spiritual predecessor to Athens—my Stones of Venice Tour—I know that the 3 things which most combined to create Venice’s magnificent 13th century—its first brilliant flowering—were:
· Byzantine suzerainty.
· Geography (Venice is the furthest harbour into Western Europe).
· The 4th Crusade.
All of which gave to Venice a) Greek art, b) Catholicism & prosperity, then c) immediate & unimagined wealth.

So I now spend my days trying to figure out what made Classical Greece.

And while trying to reduce them and their civilisation to intelligibility, reading these Greeks has, in so short a time—and in great time for such intense and maddening isolation—given me a completely new outlook on life.


There’s a strange serenity to every word of The Greeks, an untarnished-ness to them: an optimism enveloped in fatalism, or fatalism enveloped in optimism (I haven’t yet decided which). They have bold calm amid eternity, joy in the face of nothingness, gratitude even for pain. They accept life with its countless miseries and never shrink from hinting—while living more fully than any people since—that it may have been better for us never to have been born.

Just read this from Aeschylus:

“God, whose law it is that he who learns must suffer. Even in our sleep pain that cannot forget, falls drop by drop upon the heart, and in our own despite, against our will, comes wisdom to us by the awful grace of God.”

The Greeks are an enthusiasm that I cannot help sharing with anyone who’s interested, in person or online—so I here include for your reading astonishment a collection of 30 pages from and about The Greeks.

200 quotations from 55 different poets, playwrights, historians, kings,
novelists, psychoanalysts, artists, & adventurers:

[ The Greeks ]

And later in the year, to get to know these Ancient Greeks IN Greece?

The Stones of Athens Tour.

A proper introduction to the history, the art, the architecture, the philosophy (O, the philosophy!), that still makes Ancient Greece the pinnacle of human achievement, and an example to live by, happily.

October 2020. Forging ahead as scheduled.

J O S H W R I T E B L O G

Filed Under: Author, Books, Culture, Greece, History, Philosophy, Travel, Writer Tagged With: athens, history

Bangkok!

November 18, 2019 by Joshua Humphreys Leave a Comment

The city, I think, to which I have the most unique relationship. (not, my relationship is more unique than anyone else’s—but rather my relationship to Bangkok is more unique than my relationship to any other city).

The first place I ever landed in Asia! The city to which I first fled when I realised that I could be a writer and nothing else! The city that kept drawing me in, day by day, week by week—until I decided to live there for 2017, and which I quickly found supremely amenable to the way I work.

For years I thought I was an oddity, that my love for Bangkok was a defect—WHAT ABOUT EUROPE!? And the reputation that city has among most people! Ladyboys, backpackers, garbage, smog, traffic.

But Bangkok to me is a city of temples, canals, street food, sunsets, harmonious mayhem. It’s a city in which I’ve set sections of 2 of my novels. And it’s a city which continues to enthral and delight me.

Recently I read a book by a similarly afflicted writer (Alex Kerr), and was astounded to find my reservations in the words of another. If only I had listened to myself for the last few years, had backed my own hunch! So I’ve at last admitted it:

I love Bangkok, and it is supremely amenable to my work.

My 2020 is looking like: the biggest New Cavalier Reading Society I’ve ever done. A full, months-long launch of The Creative Art of Wishfulness. Writing a new Comedy Novel. And (with more information to follow) a “Stones of Bangkok” Tour.

It again makes sense for me to move to Bangkok.

And so I shall, and am doing so, in just 3 weeks’ time. Where I’ll begin to research and plan a Bangkok Tour in time for a November-December 2020 season…

Filed Under: Bangkok, Culture, Travel Tagged With: bangkok, thailand, travel

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