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Travel with Rick Steves

142a Salman Rushdie: "The Enchantress of Florence" & Sailing the Eastern Mediterranean

Travel with Rick Steves

Rick Steves

Places & Travel, Rick Steves, Travel, Public Radio, 721132, Society & Culture, Npr, Europe

4.52.5K Ratings

🗓️ 17 January 2010

⏱️ 52 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Rick's guest, Sir Salman Rushdie, explains the motivation for his novel, "The Enchantress of Florence," and offers suggestions on how to confront the cultural clash between "East and West" Also, sailing expert Anthony Sandberg joins Rick with recommendations on how to experience the eastern Mediterranean much like the ancients did -- island-hopping with a boat. For more information on Travel with Rick Steves - including episode descriptions, program archives and related details - visit www.ricksteves.com.

Transcript

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0:00.0

The most memorable travel experiences are people to people connections,

0:03.5

contacts that bridge the differences between cultures and world views.

0:07.5

Hi, I'm Rick Steves.

0:09.5

Today on Travel with Rick Steves,

0:11.0

we have a special guest who embodies the East Meets West metaphor

0:15.1

and not without a price. Sir Salma Rushdie writes some of the most significant literature

0:19.8

of our age. He joins us in a moment to explain the inspiration for his latest novel,

0:24.0

The Enchantress of Florence, in which a scoundrel from Italy challenges the world of a powerful

0:29.0

mogul in 16th century India.

0:31.0

Since we now live in this age when there is such a complicated engagement between

0:35.4

east and west, I thought it would be very interesting to go look at the beginning of

0:38.7

it. Sometimes you look at the beginning of something, it gives you some clues for why the future turned out as it did.

0:44.2

And later in the hour, we'll get inspired to sail the Eastern Mediterranean.

0:47.8

Anthony Sandberg has logged countless nautical miles there, and he recommends how we can rediscover the ancient roots of the Mediterranean from a

0:54.4

sailor's perspective.

0:55.8

Welcome aboard for the hour ahead.

0:57.7

It's Travel with Rick Steeves.

1:00.9

It's not often you find an extensive bibliography in a work of fiction.

1:05.0

Author Salman Rushdie spent seven years researching to create the characters and situation in his novel The Enchantress of Florence.

1:13.1

He's joining us today on Travel with Rick Steves to share with us his latest work,

1:16.9

featuring the exhilarating collision between history and cultures real and imagined. And later in the hour, we'll get inspired to go sailing in the

1:24.8

waters of the Eastern Mediterranean. Thanks for joining us on Travel with Rick

...

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