John Bailey - Sydney Morning Herald - December 18, 2011
P.J. O'Rourke travels with a right-wing sensibility.
HOLIDAYS IN HECKP.J. O'Rourke,
Grove Press, A$29.99
A great work of travel writing can command a physical response from its reader: the neck-tingle of a sublime landscape rendered in prose, the gut-drop when a voyage takes a turn for the worse.
There's one such moment in veteran P.J. O'Rourke's latest collection of wanderings that had me bug-eyed and palms-to-cheeks like the kid from Home Alone. He's not describing the frothing might of a charging bison or the rumble of an avalanche gathering momentum. In fact, this moment of high drama occurs in a museum of natural history in Chicago, of all places. O'Rourke happens upon a plaque describing ancient Mayan culture that notes the practice of sacrifice finds its metaphorical equivalent in most of the religions of today. Cue O'Rourke:
If that sounds a little unusual an entry in a book promising ''frightening vacation fun'', it's really just the most overt expression of the world view underscoring each of the 19 essays here. O'Rourke is an SUV-driving, duck-shooting, Jack Daniel's-swilling conservative of that peculiarly American ilk. He's an outspoken Republican with the requisite, if inexplicable, sneering disdain for the French (I'm convinced party membership involves smashing a baguette with a ceremonial hammer) but, in fairness, he dislikes most cultures equally. And, as a conservative, he'll be the first to tell you the leftie-led US is pretty screwed, too.
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