Warned by a fortune-teller not to risk flying, the author
- a seasoned correspondent
- took to travelling by rail, road & sea. Consulting fortune-tellers & shamans wherever he went, he learnt to understand & respect older ways of life & beliefs now threatened by the crasser forms of Western modernity. William Shawcross in the Literary Review praised Terzani for `his beautifully written adventure story...a voyage of self-discovery... He sees fortune-tellers, soothsayers, astrologers, chiromancers, seers, shamans, magicians, palmists, frauds, men & women of god (many gods) all over Asia & in Europe too... Almost every page & every story celebrates the mystical & the unknowable. It is a fabulous story of renewal & change... Terzani is already something of a legend. He has written magnificently all his life. Never better than now.` Yes, the fortune-teller did save him from an air-crash in Cambodia. Looking back afterwards, Terzani reckoned that `I was marked for death & instead I was reborn.`