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Author Bio
Birth—March 6, 1929, Lancy
Where—Lancy, Switzerland
Death—February 17, 1998
Where—Geneva, Switzerland
Education—L.L., University of Geneva


Nicolas Bouvier was a 20th-century Swiss traveller, writer, icon painter and photographer.

Khyber Pass (1953-1954)
Without even waiting for the results of his exams (he would learn in Bombay that he had obtained his Licence in Letters and Law, he left Switzerland in June, 1953, with his friend Thierry Vernet in a Fiat Topolino.

First destination: Yugoslavia. The voyage lasted till December 1954. The voyage led the two men to Turkey, to Iran and to Pakistan, Thierry Vernet leaving his friend at the Khyber Pass. Bouvier continued alone, recounting the journey in L'Usage du monde, published in English translation as The Way of the World.

The pilgrim finds the words to express himself, and his feet follow them faithfully:

A journey does not need reasons. Before long, it proves to be reason enough in itself. One thinks that one is going to make a journey, yet soon it is the journey that makes or unmakes you.

The book has been described as a voyage of self-discovery with comparisons to Robert M. Pirsig's Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.

Sri Lanka/Ceylon (1955)
With intermittent company, Bouvier crossed Afghanistan, Pakistan and India before reaching Ceylon. Here he lost his footing: the solitude and the heat floored him. It took him seven months to leave the island and almost thirty years to free himself of the weight of this adventure with the writing of Le Poisson-scorpion. It ends on a quote from Louis-Ferdinand Celine: "The worst defeat of all is to forget and especially the thing that has defeated you."

Japan (1955-1956)
After Ceylon, he left for another island: Japan, where he found a country in the throes of change. He left but would return a few years later. These experiences led to Japon, which would become Chroniques japonaises after a third sojourn in 1970 (Bouvier had produced books for the Swiss pavilion at the World Exposition in Osaka) and a complete re-edition.

Of this country, he said: "Japan is a lesson in economy. It is not considered good form to take up too much space." In The Japanese Chronicles, he blended his personal experiences of Japan with Japanese history and rewrote a Japanese history from a Western perspectives.

Ireland (1985)
Building on a report for a journal in the Aran Islands, Bouvier wrote Journal d'Aran et d'autres lieux, a tale of travel that slips at times into the supernatural, the voyager suffering from typhoid. His appreciation of the air of the Irish islands is described as that which...

dilates, tonifies, intoxicates, lightens, frees up animal spirits in the head who give themselves over to unknown but amusing games. It brings together the virtues of champagne, cocaine, caffeine, amorous rapture and the tourism office makes a big mistake in forgetting it in its prospectuses.

(Adapted from Wikipedia. Retrieved 2/4/2016.)