|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewA New York Times Notable Book • ""An elegant, nonlinear reflection on how flying on a commercial airliner—even while painfully folded into a seat in coach—can lift the soul.” —The New York Times Book Review In the twenty-first century, airplane flight—once a remarkable feat of human ingenuity—has been relegated to the realm of the mundane. In this mesmerizing reflection on flying, Mark Vanhoenacker, a 747 pilot who left academia and a career in the business world to pursue his childhood dream of flying, helps us to reimagine what we—as pilots and as passengers—are actually doing when we enter the world between departure and discovery. In a seamless fusion of history, politics, geography, meteorology, ecology, family, and physics, Vanhoenacker vaults across geographical and cultural boundaries; above mountains, oceans, and deserts; through snow, wind, and rain, renewing a simultaneously humbling and almost superhuman activity and reawakening our capacity to be amazed. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mark VanhoenackerPublisher: Random House USA Inc Imprint: Vintage Books Dimensions: Width: 13.30cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 20.10cm Weight: 0.306kg ISBN: 9780804169714ISBN 10: 0804169713 Pages: 368 Publication Date: 03 May 2016 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews**A New York Times Notable Book of 2015****Named a Best Book of 2015 by The Economist ** Dwight Garner, The New York Times Vanhoenacker can put one in the mind of Henry James .His is a big-hearted book .Vanhoenacker is a talented writer, and we greet him at the start of what I hope is a career of writing about life in the heavens .marvelously literate If his book had been around in the mid-80s, I suspect I wouldn t have been afraid to fly in the first place. Tom Zoellner, The New York Times Book Review Superb .Vanhoenacker writes in a richly ethereal style, with the confidence of a professional who knows his subject well it s an elegant, nonlinear reflection on how flying on a commercial airliner even while painfully folded into a seat in coach can lift the soul and inspire an awareness of the wonderfully improbable, of the state of in-betweenness in which air travelers routinely hover. Rinker Buck, The Wall Street Journal [Vanhoenacker is] an exceptionally lucid and philosophically minded writer. He has spent the past several years taking notes about his life in the air and meditating on both the ethereal beauties and contradictions of flight He reminds me of a brainy college physics major who actually wants to be a poet. The Economist Mr Vanhoenacker, fortunately for his readers, has lost none of his sense of wonder at the miracle of flight itself...a beautifully observed collection of details, scenes, emotions and facts from the world above the world. Emily St. John Mandel, The Millions Skyfaring is a love letter to flight, to a profession, and reading it was a balm. Vanhoenacker slips easily between poetic meditation into the nature of travel and technical explanations of the mechanisms of the 747, and I found all of it fascinating....The book smeditative pacing isn t dissimilar to the rhythms of flight itself, to the way landscapes gradually unspool far below. There s tremendous pleasure in coming across theexplanations for aspects of flight I d never quite understood....It was easier, after reading it, to forget my exhaustion and the small annoyances of the worldand lose myself again inthe beauty of the flight. Geoff Dyer, The Guardian There is always something uplifting about people in love with their work, and on becoming an airline pilot Vanhoenacker (now a senior first officer with British Airways) seems to have attained a state of enviable grace....Beautifully, because simply, put. Asthe principles of aerodynamics act 'asa kind of natural sculptor' tocreate the elegance of aircraft design, so Vanhoenacker s prose has afunctional eloquence that carries thereader along for the ride. The Times Literary Supplement A Senior First Officer flying 747s for British Airways, he explains that many pilots regard aeroplanes as 'the first thing they loved about the world'. His abiding attachment is likely to make this masterly, beautifully written book one of aviation s classic texts Saint-Exupery seventy years on, and with more to say. Sarah Larson, The New Yorker, What We're Reading This Summer [Vanhoenacker]seems to have the mind of a scientist and the heart of a poet. John Wilwol, San Francisco Chronicle Skyfaring artfully demystifies the fascinating technical aspects of commercial flight while delivering poetic insights straight from the cockpit. Bill Prince, GQ Both a manual for infrequent flyers (wherein the physics and metaphysics of time and space are for once essayed in a perfectly straightforward manner) and a skilful meditation on the glories of traversing the earth at the helm of mankind's greatest technological achievement that - yes - flies from the page. Pico Iyer, author of The Man Within My Head Poets are pilots of a kind, teaching us to navigate the world anew; Mark Vanhoenacker is a pilot with the spirit, the wide-open eyes, the rare feel for beauty and discovery of an accomplished poet. Imagine Henry David Thoreau reflecting on the wonders of the lights of Oman as seen from the cockpit of a 747, and you begin to have something of the fresh magic of this exceptional debut. This is a work for anyone who longs to learn how to see again, and to live. Alain de Botton, author of How Proust Can Change Your Life One of the most constantly fascinating, but consistently under-appreciated aspects of modern life is the business of flying. Mark Vanhoenacker has written the ideal book on the subject: a description of what it s like to fly by a commercial pilot who is also a master prose stylist and a deeply sensitive human being, familiar with great art and literature and always willing to tease out the psychologically resonant implications of his job. This is a man who is at once a technical expert (he flies 747s and Airbuses across continents) and a poet of the skies. This couldn t be more highly recommended. James Fallows, author of China Airborne Skyfaring is a beautiful, revelatory work of observation, thought, and expression. The experience of traveling through the air, which would have seemed miraculous in any previous moment of human existence, has been drained of its wonder through the drear of the modern airline experience. From his seat in the front of the airplane, Mark Vanhoenacker captures and conveys the magic of seeing the world from above. Patrick Smith, author of Cockpit Confidential Mark Vanhoenacker is the thinking man's pilot, and his is a rare and refreshing perspective in an age when commercial flying is taken almost entirely for granted. Through prose as passionate and erudite as it is informative, he describes not merely the mechanical workings of flight, but will rekindle, in those who care to listen, a lost appreciation for the marvel of global air travel. The Times (London) A 330-page ode to the wonder of flight in the tradition of the great pioneer pilot-author Antoine de Saint Exupery and Charles Lindbergh....Like the best pilot writers, Vanhoenacker paints humanity seen from the aviator s perch, woven together with a fascinating layman s account of the mechanics of flight, the feat in which a 380-tonne jet can lift people and cargo away from the ground and across the sky ....Vanhoenacker invokes philosophers, music, history, and his own past and family to convey the sense of discovery and disorientation that he feels crisscrossing the globe between Tokyo, Johannesburg, Los Angeles, London and the Arabian Gulf....a riveting practitioner s account of a human achievement that has been rendered humdrum by its own success. The Scotsman 'Wonderfully evocative and clear-eyed...fascinating.' Giles Foden, Conde Nast Traveller (UK) Not since Antoine de Saint-Exupery s classic Vol de Nuit... has there been such a fantastic book about flying as Mark Vanhoenacker s Skyfaring: A Journey With a Pilot.... What marks this book out is its author s ability to bring a genuine poetic sensibility to the experience of flying and the feelings of strangeness and beauty that it engenders.... Skyfaring takes the genre to a whole new level. I found myself turning over the corners of almost every page with excitement and admiration. The Bookseller (UK) This airborne odyssey in [Vanhoenacker s] company is enthralling, from the physics of lift and the vicissitudes of flight paths, to St Elmo s Fire, the Aurora Borealis, pristine sunsets, and the fellow pilots he passes like ships in the night sky. Read it, and you ll find yourself requesting a window seat every time you fly. Erica Wagner, The New Statesman (UK) Mark Vanhoenacker's Skyfaring reminds us of the magic of aviation...fluid and elegant...full of information that is wonderful in its simplicity...Flying planes isn t just his job: it remains his passion. Libby Purves, BBC Radio 4 (UK) A longhaul airline pilot whose vision is unexpectedly poetic and romantic...what stood out for me was that sense of wonder up there...a rather lovely book. Pilot Magazine (UK) A great read for absolutely everyone with an interest in flying...a beautiful odyssey of observation...if you believe that airline flying has become a monotonous, humdrum experience, the victim of its own success perhaps, then reading this book will take you to a fresh and thoughtful appreciation of the magic and excitement of flight. Ian Critchley, The Sunday Times (UK) Engaging, even poetic...Vanhoenacker s passionate and beautifully written book will remind even the most jaded traveller of the wonder of flight. Monocle What a great idea this is...a masterpiece of time, distance, palm trees, frosty mornings, lofty ambition and self-effacing charm. Dan Glaun, MassLive.com A lyrical meditation on his work as a pilot for British Airways, and takes readers through the routines and wonders of life in the cockpit. Karen Brown, New England Public Radio Skyfaring is essentially a love letter to the skies. Booklist Vanhoenacker invites readers to join him in the cockpit of a 747 so that we might experience the oft-forgotten magic of flight. In elegant and balanced prose, he meditates on every aspect of aviation. The lift Vanhoenacker creates with his language is due to the carefully constructed machinery of each chapter the way in which he balances personal narrative, research, and reverential reflection It is an artful and elevated look at the soul in flight. Kirkus *starred review* This pilot is an accomplished stylistic acrobat who flies and writes with the greatest of ease. The anatomy of an airliner and peripatetic aerial travel, as well as sophisticated worldview, combine for first-class reading sure to enhance your next flight. Publishers Weekly In this intimate, often illuminating piece, Slate columnist Vanhoenacker takes readers on a personal tour of his world as an airline pilot....Vanhoenacker conveys that sense of freedom, wanderlust, and traversing a large world made small by travel, while at the same time demystifying the inside of the cockpit and humanizing the all-powerful pilots within....Packed with eloquent insight into a high-flying world. From the Hardcover edition. A New York Times Notable Book A Best Book of the Year San Francisco Chronicle - The Economist - GQ - Kirkus Reviews Superb. . . . An elegant, nonlinear reflection on how flying on a commercial airliner--even while painfully folded into a seat in coach--can lift the soul. --The New York Times Book Review A beautifully observed collection of details, scenes, emotions and facts from the world above the world. --The Economist Remarkable. . . . [Skyfaring] lifts the thoughts and spirits. --James Fallows, The Atlantic Marvelously literate. . . . Vanhoenacker . . . can put one in mind of Henry James. . . . A big-hearted book. --The New York Times Gorgeous and captivating. . . . Skyfaring artfully demystifies the fascinating technical aspects of commercial flight while delivering poetic insights straight from the cockpit. --San Francisco Chronicle Masterly, beautifully written. --The Times Literary Supplement [Vanhoenacker is] an exceptionally lucid and philosophically minded writer. --The Wall Street Journal Not since Antoine de Saint-Exup�ry's classic Vol de Nuit . . . has there been such a fantastic book about flying. . . . Skyfaring takes the genre to a whole new level. --Cond� Nast Traveller Imagine Henry David Thoreau reflecting on the wonders of the lights of Oman as seen from the cockpit of a 747, and you begin to have something of the fresh magic of this exceptional debut. --Pico Iyer, author of The Man Within My Head Riveting. . . . Vanhoenacker paints humanity seen from the aviator's perch, woven together with a fascinating layman's account of the mechanics of flight. . . . [He] invokes philosophers, music, history, and his own past and family to convey the sense of discovery and disorientation that he feels crisscrossing the globe. --The Times (London) A love letter to flight. . . . Vanhoenacker slips easily between poetic meditation into the nature of travel and technical explanations of the mechanisms of the 747, and I found all of it fascinating. It is a delight to encounter someone so unabashedly enamored of the romance of his profession. --Emily St. John Mandel, The Millions [A] revelatory work of observation, thought, and expression. --James Fallows, author of China Airborne Flying, a century after Kitty Hawk, can seem both scary and banal, the realm of underwear bombers and miniature mouthwashes, but Vanhoenacker recovers its metaphysics. --The New Yorker Vanhoenacker's passionate and beautifully written book will remind even the most jaded traveller of the wonder of flight. --The Sunday Times (UK) A masterpiece of time, distance, palm trees, frosty mornings, lofty ambition and self-effacing charm. --Monocle A 747 pilot with a poetic streak. . . . The writing makes flying feel as amazing at it really is. --Wired.com A description of what it's like to fly by a commercial pilot who is also a master prose stylist and a deeply sensitive human being. . . . This couldn't be more highly recommended. --Alain de Botton, author of How Proust Can Change Your Life Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again. --London Evening Standard [Skyfaring] never loses sight of how beautiful it is to soar above the clouds. . . . [Vanhoenacker's] writing is fluid and elegant. --The New Statesman (UK) An author of real distinction with a genuinely poetic sensibility as well as a memorable turn of phrase. --The Spectator Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again. --London Evening Standard A skilful meditation on the glories of traversing the earth at the helm of mankind's greatest technological achievement. . . . You'll quickly find yourself in thrall to Vanhoenacker's marvellous prose. --GQ (UK) Through prose as passionate and erudite as it is informative, [Vanhoenacker] describes not merely the mechanical workings of flight, but will rekindle, in those who care to listen, a lost appreciation for the marvel of global air travel. --Patrick Smith, author of Cockpit Confidential A New York Times Notable Book • A Best Book of the Year: San Francisco Chronicle, The Economist, GQ, Kirkus Reviews “Superb. . . . An elegant, nonlinear reflection on how flying on a commercial airliner—even while painfully folded into a seat in coach—can lift the soul.” —The New York Times Book Review “A beautifully observed collection of details, scenes, emotions and facts from the world above the world.” —The Economist “Remarkable. . . . [Skyfaring] lifts the thoughts and spirits.” —James Fallows, The Atlantic “Marvelously literate. . . . Vanhoenacker . . . can put one in mind of Henry James. . . . A big-hearted book.” —The New York Times “Gorgeous and captivating. . . . Skyfaring artfully demystifies the fascinating technical aspects of commercial flight while delivering poetic insights straight from the cockpit.” —San Francisco Chronicle “Masterly, beautifully written.” —The Times Literary Supplement “[Vanhoenacker is] an exceptionally lucid and philosophically minded writer.” —The Wall Street Journal “Not since Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s classic Vol de Nuit . . . has there been such a fantastic book about flying. . . . Skyfaring takes the genre to a whole new level.” —Condé Nast Traveller “Imagine Henry David Thoreau reflecting on the wonders of the lights of Oman as seen from the cockpit of a 747, and you begin to have something of the fresh magic of this exceptional debut.” —Pico Iyer, author of The Man Within My Head “Riveting. . . . Vanhoenacker paints humanity seen from the aviator’s perch, woven together with a fascinating layman’s account of the mechanics of flight. . . . [He] invokes philosophers, music, history, and his own past and family to convey the sense of discovery and disorientation that he feels crisscrossing the globe.” —The Times (London) “A love letter to flight. . . . Vanhoenacker slips easily between poetic meditation into the nature of travel and technical explanations of the mechanisms of the 747, and I found all of it fascinating. It is a delight to encounter someone so unabashedly enamored of the romance of his profession.” —Emily St. John Mandel, The Millions “[A] revelatory work of observation, thought, and expression.” —James Fallows, author of China Airborne “Flying, a century after Kitty Hawk, can seem both scary and banal, the realm of underwear bombers and miniature mouthwashes, but Vanhoenacker recovers its metaphysics.” —The New Yorker “Vanhoenacker’s passionate and beautifully written book will remind even the most jaded traveller of the wonder of flight.” —The Sunday Times (UK) “A masterpiece of time, distance, palm trees, frosty mornings, lofty ambition and self-effacing charm.” —Monocle “A 747 pilot with a poetic streak. . . . The writing makes flying feel as amazing at it really is.” —Wired.com “A description of what it’s like to fly by a commercial pilot who is also a master prose stylist and a deeply sensitive human being. . . . This couldn’t be more highly recommended.” —Alain de Botton, author of How Proust Can Change Your Life “Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again.” —London Evening Standard “[Skyfaring] never loses sight of how beautiful it is to soar above the clouds. . . . [Vanhoenacker’s] writing is fluid and elegant.” —The New Statesman (UK) “An author of real distinction with a genuinely poetic sensibility as well as a memorable turn of phrase.” —The Spectator “Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again.” —London Evening Standard “A skilful meditation on the glories of traversing the earth at the helm of mankind’s greatest technological achievement. . . . You’ll quickly find yourself in thrall to Vanhoenacker’s marvellous prose.” —GQ (UK) “Through prose as passionate and erudite as it is informative, [Vanhoenacker] describes not merely the mechanical workings of flight, but will rekindle, in those who care to listen, a lost appreciation for the marvel of global air travel.” —Patrick Smith, author of Cockpit Confidential One of the Best Books of the Year The New York Times * San Francisco Chronicle * The Economist * Kirkus Reviews Superb. . . . An elegant, nonlinear reflection on how flying on a commercial airliner even while painfully folded into a seat in coach can lift the soul. The New York Times Book Review A beautifully observed collection of details, scenes, emotions and facts from the world above the world. The Economist Remarkable. . . . [ Skyfaring ] lifts the thoughts and spirits. James Fallows, The Atlantic Marvelously literate. . . . Vanhoenacker . . . can put one in mind of Henry James. . . . A big-hearted book. The New York Times Gorgeous and captivating. . . . Skyfaring artfully demystifies the fascinating technical aspects of commercial flight while delivering poetic insights straight from the cockpit. San Francisco Chronicle Masterly, beautifully written. The Times Literary Supplement [Vanhoenacker is] an exceptionally lucid and philosophically minded writer. The Wall Street Journal Not since Antoine de Saint-Exupery s classic Vol de Nuit . . . has there been such a fantastic book about flying. . . . Skyfaring takes the genre to a whole new level. Conde Nast Traveller Imagine Henry David Thoreau reflecting on the wonders of the lights of Oman as seen from the cockpit of a 747, and you begin to have something of the fresh magic of this exceptional debut. Pico Iyer, author of The Man Within My Head Riveting. . . . Vanhoenacker paints humanity seen from the aviator s perch, woven together with a fascinating layman s account of the mechanics of flight. . . . [He] invokes philosophers, music, history, and his own past and family to convey the sense of discovery and disorientation that he feels crisscrossing the globe. The Times (London) A love letter to flight. . . . Vanhoenacker slips easily between poetic meditation into the nature of travel and technical explanations of the mechanisms of the 747, and I found all of it fascinating. It is a delight to encounter someone so unabashedly enamored of the romance of his profession. Emily St. John Mandel, The Millions [A] revelatory work of observation, thought, and expression. James Fallows, author of China Airborne Flying, a century after Kitty Hawk, can seem both scary and banal, the realm of underwear bombers and miniature mouthwashes, but Vanhoenacker recovers its metaphysics. The New Yorker Vanhoenacker s passionate and beautifully written book will remind even the most jaded traveller of the wonder of flight. The Sunday Times (UK) A masterpiece of time, distance, palm trees, frosty mornings, lofty ambition and self-effacing charm. Monocle A 747 pilot with a poetic streak. . . . The writing makes flying feel as amazing at it really is. Wired.com A description of what it s like to fly by a commercial pilot who is also a master prose stylist and a deeply sensitive human being. . . . This couldn t be more highly recommended. Alain de Botton, author of How Proust Can Change Your Life Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again. London Evening Standard [ Skyfaring ] never loses sight of how beautiful it is to soar above the clouds. . . . [Vanhoenacker s] writing is fluid and elegant. The New Statesman (UK) An author of real distinction with a genuinely poetic sensibility as well as a memorable turn of phrase. The Spectator Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again. London Evening Standard A skilful meditation on the glories of traversing the earth at the helm of mankind s greatest technological achievement. . . . You ll quickly find yourself in thrall to Vanhoenacker s marvellous prose. GQ (UK) Through prose as passionate and erudite as it is informative, [Vanhoenacker] describes not merely the mechanical workings of flight, but will rekindle, in those who care to listen, a lost appreciation for the marvel of global air travel. Patrick Smith, author of Cockpit Confidential A New York Times Notable Book A Best Book of the Year San Francisco Chronicle - The Economist - GQ - Kirkus Reviews Superb. . . . An elegant, nonlinear reflection on how flying on a commercial airliner--even while painfully folded into a seat in coach--can lift the soul. --The New York Times Book Review A beautifully observed collection of details, scenes, emotions and facts from the world above the world. --The Economist Remarkable. . . . [Skyfaring] lifts the thoughts and spirits. --James Fallows, The Atlantic Marvelously literate. . . . Vanhoenacker . . . can put one in mind of Henry James. . . . A big-hearted book. --The New York Times Gorgeous and captivating. . . . Skyfaring artfully demystifies the fascinating technical aspects of commercial flight while delivering poetic insights straight from the cockpit. --San Francisco Chronicle Masterly, beautifully written. --The Times Literary Supplement [Vanhoenacker is] an exceptionally lucid and philosophically minded writer. --The Wall Street Journal Not since Antoine de Saint-Exupery's classic Vol de Nuit . . . has there been such a fantastic book about flying. . . . Skyfaring takes the genre to a whole new level. --Conde Nast Traveller Imagine Henry David Thoreau reflecting on the wonders of the lights of Oman as seen from the cockpit of a 747, and you begin to have something of the fresh magic of this exceptional debut. --Pico Iyer, author of The Man Within My Head Riveting. . . . Vanhoenacker paints humanity seen from the aviator's perch, woven together with a fascinating layman's account of the mechanics of flight. . . . [He] invokes philosophers, music, history, and his own past and family to convey the sense of discovery and disorientation that he feels crisscrossing the globe. --The Times (London) A love letter to flight. . . . Vanhoenacker slips easily between poetic meditation into the nature of travel and technical explanations of the mechanisms of the 747, and I found all of it fascinating. It is a delight to encounter someone so unabashedly enamored of the romance of his profession. --Emily St. John Mandel, The Millions [A] revelatory work of observation, thought, and expression. --James Fallows, author of China Airborne Flying, a century after Kitty Hawk, can seem both scary and banal, the realm of underwear bombers and miniature mouthwashes, but Vanhoenacker recovers its metaphysics. --The New Yorker Vanhoenacker's passionate and beautifully written book will remind even the most jaded traveller of the wonder of flight. --The Sunday Times (UK) A masterpiece of time, distance, palm trees, frosty mornings, lofty ambition and self-effacing charm. --Monocle A 747 pilot with a poetic streak. . . . The writing makes flying feel as amazing at it really is. --Wired.com A description of what it's like to fly by a commercial pilot who is also a master prose stylist and a deeply sensitive human being. . . . This couldn't be more highly recommended. --Alain de Botton, author of How Proust Can Change Your Life Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again. --London Evening Standard [Skyfaring] never loses sight of how beautiful it is to soar above the clouds. . . . [Vanhoenacker's] writing is fluid and elegant. --The New Statesman (UK) An author of real distinction with a genuinely poetic sensibility as well as a memorable turn of phrase. --The Spectator Vanhoenacker makes [flying] wondrous again. --London Evening Standard A skilful meditation on the glories of traversing the earth at the helm of mankind's greatest technological achievement. . . . You'll quickly find yourself in thrall to Vanhoenacker's marvellous prose. --GQ (UK) Through prose as passionate and erudite as it is informative, [Vanhoenacker] describes not merely the mechanical workings of flight, but will rekindle, in those who care to listen, a lost appreciation for the marvel of global air travel. --Patrick Smith, author of Cockpit Confidential Author InformationMark Vanhoenacker is a pilot and writer. A regular contributor to The New York Times and Slate, he has also written for Wired, the Financial Times, the Los Angeles Times, and The Independent. Born in Massachusetts, he trained as a historian and worked as a management consultant before starting his flight training in Britain in 2001. His airline career began in 2003. He now flies the Boeing 747 from London to major cities around the world. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |