Ryszard Kapuscinski, Travels with Herodotus

In Travels with Herodotus, Polish journalist Ryszard Kapuscinski writes about some of his experiences traveling the world as a foreign correspondent, beginning with his first ever trip abroad, to India, in the 1950s. On the day his editor gave him that assignment, she also handed him a copy of Herodotus's History, a far-ranging account of the clash between the Persians and Greeks in the 5th century B.C. and the antecedents to that conflict. Herodotus is the so-called Father of History because he invented the genre, but he was also really the father of journalism—a roving reporter, like Kapuscinski, who traveled the world and interviewed locals and compiled a narrative to preserve information and try to explain events. Kapuscinski felt a kinship with Herodotus across the millennia. He describes himself as regularly carrying his copy of the History with him and dipping into it at intervals. He alternates in this book between his own reports and those of Herodotus. The Herodotus sections include translated snippets of the History and speculative paragraphs in which Kapuscinski imagines what his predecessor's experiences may have been. So the result is a kind of hybrid, a travelogue through space (in his reports) and time (the Herodotus bits). While each of these parts made for interesting enough reading, they don't really fit together all that well. Sometimes his shoehorning Herodotus into the narrative felt a little jarring. (Case in point: the author's odd and arguably pointless insertion of Herodotus's account of the Amazons and Scythians in his book's last chapter.) Still, it's an interesting enough read, and I was happy to re-immerse myself in Herodotus' world for a bit.
Member discussion