"Dyer''s virtue is not the whole-hearted embrace of experience and exotic locales but the parsing of degrees of disappointment. He also doesn''t pretend to be heading anywhere, but then ''White Sands'' turns into a memoir and becomes unexpectedly moving.Dyer''s tone as he relates his frightening brush with tragedy is calm and full of curiosity, possibly as a result of eschewing drama for his entire life. ''White Sands'' is a short book, brisk, hard to take and worth the attempt, just the sort of paradox Dyer most enjoys." -- Jane Smiley, Los Angeles Times "Surpassingly eloquent.there''s no other writer quite like Dyer.The real action is in the lively intercourse between Dyer''s mind and the outside world.An essential part of travel is the inevitable sense that wherever you''ve gotten to isn''t quite what you hoped it would be--just as you yourself are never, not completely, the traveler you thought you would be.
" -- Lev Grossman, Time "With philosophical incisiveness, Dyer extols the virtue of landscape to conjure in himself the tangible and the mirage, the real and the illusion, the possessed object and the desired object. There is an undeniable joy throughout Dyer''s writing, an affirmation that travel and the experience of place--not merely being someplace, but being present in it--is a gateway to the humanity of past, present, and future. A mesmerizing compendium that reflects on time, place, and just what, exactly, we are doing here." --Kirkus *starred review* "''White Sands'' isn''t just a catalog of travel mishaps, with Mr. Dyer cast as an English-speaking Monsieur Hulot. It is also a rumination on the meanings we assign the strange destinations of our pilgrimages.Mr. Dyer is keenly, almost achingly, aware of our own impermanence.
His imagination, you could say, has a built-in time-lapse function. He sees a lifetime of past and future boredom in a museum guard''s face; the sight of a particular soccer field immediately induces ''a vision of its own demise''; ''The Lightning Field'' makes him wonder what aliens will make of it long after humans are gone." -- Jennifer Senior, The New York Times "What is the point of anything, really? That''s the basis for much, maybe most, of the comedy in this world. And that''s the basis for the singularly entertaining oeuvre of the writer Geoff Dyer, who takes a headlong interest in things -- ideas, places, works of art -- only to fall back on his default position: prone, and despairing. In his ninth nonfiction book (he''s also turned out four novels and several essay collections), the very droll Dyer makes a series of pilgrimages, then wonders what all the fuss was about. The fact that the reader knows that this will be his reaction takes away nothing from the amusement, and occasional enlightenment, of the journey. That''s Dyer''s specialty." --San Francisco Chronicle "Reasons to read Dyer, a critic, novelist, and creative nonfiction writer with a clutch of prestigious awards: he is an exhilaratingly superb stylist who uses his literary might and artistic and cultural erudition to express irreverent and irascible opinions and philosophical musings.
And when he is in travelogue mode, as he is here, his observations are stunning in their candor about disappointment (his heart, he tells us, ''is prone to sinking'') and acidly hilarious.Wherever he goes (Watts Towers, the Forbidden City), Dyer reports on the glorious complexities of both outer and inner worlds with acerbity, delving intelligence, and disarming and profound wit." --Booklist "Any writer in need of a story should just get out there and pick up a hitchhiker. Literature may not want for hitchhiking stories, but you can never have too many. The best I''ve read lately is the title essay in White Sands , Geoff Dyer''s new collection of travel writing. White Sands is chockablock with memorable pieces--a trip to Gauguin''s "babelicious" Tahiti, a stay at De Maria''s Lightning Field --but this hitchhiking episode, so loaded with nervous potential, is the one I keep returning to. Dyer''s gift for comic understatement is on display throughout, as when he writes, ''I sometimes think that this is all any of us really want from our time on earth: an explanation.''" -- Paris Review, Staff Picks of the Week "[Dyer''s] perception is sharp and his frame of reference is wide even when he lingers on banalities; and when focusing attention on ''higher'' cultural forms, he is mindful to stay true to our experience: the irrelevant thoughts and prosaic desires that tug at us while we are, say, contemplating phenomenology.
His search for authenticity is reminiscent of Walter Benjamin''s conception of the ''aura'' of a work of art and the rituals we attach to it; the ''fabric of tradition'' (for Benjamin) in which it is embedded.Entertaining and thought provoking." --The Times Literary Supplement "Echoes and residues and lingering resonances thrill the author, which is ultimately the wonderful thing about Dyer''s racing, wildly associative mind.When Dyer''s insights gain altitude, they are transcendent, reminding us that every square inch of the planet shimmers with the magnetism of its former life and former meaning." --The Boston Globe "Where do we come from, where are we going, and when we get there, what, specifically, defines a particular place? These are the questions Dyer asks in a series of essays ostensibly about travel but actually much deeper. (Not surprisingly, since he''s a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature who''s won the E.M. Forster Award, a National Book Critics Circle Award for criticism, and a 2015 Windham-Campbell Prize.
) From touring Beijing''s Forbidden City with a suspect guide to picking up a hitchhiker near a prison at White Sands, NM, to visiting Norway to see the Northern Lights, which never materialize, but finding a whole new view of things after a medical incident at home in Venice, CA (he''s always wanted to live there), English author Dyer will surely be taking readers on a smart and meditative journey." --Library Journal "In these humorous essays, Dyer is at his funniest when he travels to Scandinavia to see the northern lights, but elects to stay in and watch a football match; or goes to see the Spiral Jetty in Utah and is slightly unimpressed. This book never takes itself too seriously, yet manages to comment impressively on art''s place in society." -- San Francisco Chronicle , Book Seller Recommendations "Its seemingly straightforward travel narratives--with stops in Tahiti, the Arctic Circle, New Mexico, and China, among others--are obliquely fictionalized and rife with the author''s hopscotch intellect. Everywhere he goes Dyer finds inspired connections across music, art, and time." --BOMB Magazine "Dyer writing about things? I''m in! It hardly matters what the things are at this point--Dyer has established that he can write about basically anything and make it interesting--but in this case the things mostly involve travel.A consistently enjoyable and thought-provoking collection." --Slate, "Many of us here at Powell''s keep a list of authors with whom we''d most want to get together for dinner.
My own list has changed quite a bit over the years, but the one constant has been Geoff Dyer. He is a true original -- intelligent, unpretentious, deep-thinking, and often hilarious. His new essay collection, White Sands: Experiences from the Outside World, is the type of book that will alter the way you look at the world around you. In it, he visits places that are well known, like the Forbidden City in Beijing, and others that you''ve probably never heard of, like the Lightning Field in New Mexico. He describes each of these places in his own unique style and with enough Dyer-esque tangents along the way that you''ll soon feel compelled to pay visits to these places yourself." --Powels.com "Geoff Dyer never fails to arrive at the truth of any given situation--even when that truth is that not everything in life is figure-out-able. With White Sands, Dyer contributes nine stories, some previously published, often in a very different form, that taket he reader from Tahiti to Beijing to Norwway to the White Sands of the title, and present the act of traveling in all of its uncomfortable, disappointing, and awe-inspiring reality.
As a whole, this collection sets off in pursuit of meaning not via search engine, but through actualy lived experience, be it mundane, miserable, urgent, or sublime." --Nylon "In this collection of essays, roving critic and beloved polymath Geoff Dyer travels to some of the worlds most famous and far-flung places, pondering why we travel and how it changes us. Whether he''s chasing Gauguin''s ghost in Tahiti, falling for a tour guide in Beijing''s Forbidden City, or giving a suspiciously courteous hitchhiker a lift in White Sands, New Mexico, Dyer''s journeys delight and inspire at every turn." --Virtuoso Life "Dyer, though not a travel writer by definition, brillianty and often hilariously enriches the genre.One hopes he will continue to dazzle for many years to come." --The Weekly Standard "Sense of place is addressed here, not just with variations of ''returning home and coming to terms with it for the first time'' Or ''the journey has, in itself, become the destination.'' You''ll probably feel both of those wafting through the book from time to time -- but Dyer has, as he has demonstrated repeatedl.