book cover of Foreign Correspondences
 

Foreign Correspondences

(2000)
A non fiction book by

 
 
He who would bring home the wealth of the Indies must carry the wealth of the Indies with him. - Spanish proverb

Lesley Krueger started travelling the moment she was old enough to get on planes, trains and buses by herself. Propelling her was the knowledge that her two immigrant grandmothers had never felt at home in the New World. They remained foreigners in places that often baffled them. What was it like, being a foreigner? She wanted to know.

Weaving her own travel stories in with her grandmothers' tales, Lesley explores the idea of home and away. Expatriation, the nature of being foreign, the importance of feeling part of a community: these things become crucial as she travels through India, Brazil, Mexico, Japan and both the U.S. and Canada.

Sometimes things get funny: spending the night in a cheap hotel that proves to be a small-town brothel. Sometimes she meets danger: jaguar poachers in Brazil. Then there's the time she finds herself on a Twin Otter flying through a storm in Labrador, and discovers the reason the plywood floor has holes in it.

Some people say we displace ourselves not to find what we're looking for, but to find out what we're looking for. Whatever the reason, it's clearly visceral. We say we push off, hit the road, pull up roots, take off. Hit, pull, take, push - potent verbs, gut expressions.

Birth is like that, a push from the gut. Fascinating, when you consider the New World obsession with being born again. Her grandmothers never were. Except, perhaps, in these searching words.

Praise for Foreign Correspondences:

In Foreign Correspondences, Lesley Krueger pursues her self-search with intellectual rigour and remarkable grace. Peripatetic travel is the plot of her life and she wants to know why. Is she reversing the story of her Swedish grandmother, who always lamented her immigration to Canada? Krueger started travelling as soon as she could, to the Yukon, to San Francisco, Mexico and Brazil, to India and Japan, innumerable places, and she describes how these travels made her the person she is.

Rosemary Sullivan, The Globe and Mail

Krueger takes us through so many landscapes and stories in this book that we abandon our expectations of the standard traveller's tale (arrival, epiphany, departure), and embark instead on a far more interesting journey of associations and resonating questions....(A) wise and compelling piece of writing.

Jamie Zeppa, The Globe and Mail

Lesley Krueger is the author of three novels - The Corner Garden, Drink the Sky and Poor Player - and one book of short stories, Hard Travel.



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