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Patrick Leigh Fermor was a war hero, a bon vivant, a wit, a polyglot, a belle lettrist, an impeccable prose stylist and, possibly, the last of the great English travel writers. In 1933 at the age of 19 after failing to get into university Leigh Fermor decided to travel on foot from London to Constantinople. He caught the ferry to Holland and began an epic journey, the first part of which he chronicled in A Time of Gifts. After making it to Constantinople he fell in love with Greece and travelled there until war broke out. He joined the SOE and worked behind enemy lines in Crete. His exploits as a commando were later made into the Michael Powell film Ill Met By Moonlight.
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Patrick Leigh Fermor is the man as far as I'm concerned. He loved languages, travel, scholarship, cultural differences and most of all people. He never accepted the surface judgement on anything or anyone and preferred to investigate things for himself. He had a keen eye for the country, for buildings and human beings. There's a new biography of Fermor by Artemis Cooper out now and if the name is unfamiliar to you, you can read the excellent Daily Telegraph obituary here. If you haven't had a chance to read A Time of Gifts yet consider yourself lucky - you are in for a real treat.
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