In the footsteps of: Eric Newby
Eric Newby was one of the most prolific contributors to travel writing and photography in the 20th century, writing over 25 books and taking striking photographs of the people and places he encountered. His adventures began at the age of 18 when he joined the four-masted Finnish barque, Moshulu, and engaged in the 30,000 mile round-trip grain trade race between Ireland and Australia, which he vividly described in his first book, The Last Grain Race (1956).
Newby served with the elite Special Boat Section during World War II. Captured during an operation off the Italian coast in 1942, he spent a year in a prisoner of war camp, before escaping. Hiding in the Po Valley, he met a young Italian-Slovenian woman named Wanda Skof, whom he later married, and who would become his equal partner on many of his later travels. His memoir of that time, Love and War in the Apennines (1971) became one of his most acclaimed books. Wanda and Eric returned to Italy in 1967 when they bought a derelict farmhouse in the Apuan Alps. Newby’s humorous and affectionate account of their experience was published in ‘A small Place in Italy’ (1994).