• About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us
Saturday, January 16, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
  • Covid-19
  • News
    • All
    • Education
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • World
    Photos: Security measures heightened at U.S. and state capitols ahead of possible protests

    Photos: Security measures heightened at U.S. and state capitols ahead of possible protests

    Sources: Arsenal agree to end Ozil's contract

    Sources: Arsenal agree to end Ozil’s contract

    Yahoo News

    Rand Paul Warns One Third of Republicans Will Leave Party if GOP Senators Back Impeachment

    Joliet West’s Trent Howland (4) shoots the ball over Curie’s defense.

    Pritzker’s announcement likely ends hopes of a high school basketball season; football still pending (LIVE UPDATES)

    There was no arrest, Speaker Welch claims

    There was no arrest, Speaker Welch claims

    AOC says Zuckerberg, Facebook bear 'partial responsibility' for Capitol riots

    AOC says Zuckerberg, Facebook bear ‘partial responsibility’ for Capitol riots

    Maryland to settle with McNair family for $3.5M

    Maryland to settle with McNair family for $3.5M

    Wandavision on Disney Plus

    Those WandaVision retro commercials hint at dark things to come

    Why Evolving Your Business Right Now Is Critical | Stephanie Burns

    Why Evolving Your Business Right Now Is Critical

    Don't Just Sell Yourself, Communicate Your Value: 6 Valuable Tips

    Don’t Just Sell Yourself, Communicate Your Value: 6 Valuable Tips

  • Science & Tech
    • All
    • Mobile
    The Best Apple iPhone Deals for January 2021 | Digital Trends

    The Best Apple iPhone Deals for January 2021 | Digital Trends

    Report: Apple is building foldable iPhone prototypes

    Report: Apple is building foldable iPhone prototypes

    OnePlus Nord N10 in the hand angled

    OnePlus Nord N10 and N100 available to buy now in the US (Updated)

    Stylized image of rows of padlocks.

    Hackers used 4 zero-days to infect Windows and Android devices

    Here’s how the Galaxy S21 stacks up against the iPhone 12

    Here’s how the Galaxy S21 stacks up against the iPhone 12

    Children apologize to their dying elders for spreading COVID-19 as L.A. County reels

    Children apologize to their dying elders for spreading COVID-19 as L.A. County reels

    The website of the Telegram messaging app is seen on a computer's screen in Beijing, Thursday, June 13, 2019.  (AP Photo/Andy Wong)

    Telegram’s popularity soaring after Capitol riots: What to know

    SpaceX's Cargo Dragon spacecraft begins its undocking from the International Space Station.

    SpaceX’s Cargo Dragon spacecraft is on its way back to Earth, set to splashdown off Florida

    Bizarre new type of locomotion discovered in invasive snakes

    Bizarre new type of locomotion discovered in invasive snakes

    money-bills-wallet-coins-dollars-1017

    Second stimulus check sending in 2 phases: Will your payment make it before the deadline?

  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Merkel’s party picks another centrist as its leader — and maybe Germany’s future chancellor

    Merkel’s party picks another centrist as its leader — and maybe Germany’s future chancellor

    'It was the only ending for me': The finale of 'Promising Young Woman' explained

    ‘It was the only ending for me’: The finale of ‘Promising Young Woman’ explained

    Thar she blows up! How sea shanty TikTok took over the internet

    Thar she blows up! How sea shanty TikTok took over the internet

    Trump administration carries out 13th, final federal execution, killing Dustin Higgs

    Trump administration carries out 13th, final federal execution, killing Dustin Higgs

    Review: 'American Skin' explores race, policing and loss

    Review: ‘American Skin’ explores race, policing and loss

    Sylvain Sylvain, guitarist for glam-punk icons New York Dolls, dies at 69

    Sylvain Sylvain, guitarist for glam-punk icons New York Dolls, dies at 69

    Workers installed plywood on certain Capitol windows on Friday. - RACHEL OTWELL

    Plywood and troops to protect Statehouse

    My friendship — and last phone call — with Joanne Rogers, widow of Mister Rogers

    My friendship — and last phone call — with Joanne Rogers, widow of Mister Rogers

    The GOP’s existential crisis, explained by a former Republican Congress member

    The GOP’s existential crisis, explained by a former Republican Congress member

    Martin Luther King Jr. Day events lead this weekend's 21 culture picks

    Martin Luther King Jr. Day events lead this weekend’s 21 culture picks

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Travel
    "I think people are trying to replicate pre-COVID thrills," said Lindsey Metselaar, host of "We Met at Acme," a popular millennial dating podcast.

    ‘Cheating’ may mean something else entirely during the COVID-19 pandemic

    Archie Lyndhurst's mother reveals his cause of death: 'The results utterly floored us’

    Archie Lyndhurst’s mother reveals his cause of death: ‘The results utterly floored us’

    Palm Beach County looks to end Trump golf course lease after U.S. Capitol riot

    Palm Beach County looks to end Trump golf course lease after U.S. Capitol riot

    L.A. beauty and wellness brands for the self-care we're all craving right now

    L.A. beauty and wellness brands for the self-care we’re all craving right now

    The popularity of coach holidays was highlighted this week when National Express announced that bookings made by those aged 65 and over had leapt by 185 per cent in the past fortnight year on year

    Our guide to the best coach holidays in Britain and beyond 

    Parajumpers

    9 Wellness Resolutions So Easy, You’ll Actually Stick To Them

    Could we be to blame for an increase in food allergies? –

    Emily Ratajkowski's baby bump gets a $4,000 designer makeover

    Emily Ratajkowski’s baby bump gets a $4,000 designer makeover

    Test drive: The 2021 Ford Bronco Sport lives up to its name

    Test drive: The 2021 Ford Bronco Sport lives up to its name

    At Lake Tahoe, unfurling the statewide welcome mat is 'awkward' as pandemic rages

    At Lake Tahoe, unfurling the statewide welcome mat is ‘awkward’ as pandemic rages

36 °f
Chicago
30 ° Sun
27 ° Mon
23 ° Tue
27 ° Wed
No Result
View All Result
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine
No Result
View All Result
Home Lifestyle Travel

Appreciation: My lunch with Jan Morris, writer, traveler, transgender pioneer

by Staff Writer
December 5, 2020
in Travel
Reading Time: 4min read
0
Appreciation: My lunch with Jan Morris, writer, traveler, transgender pioneer
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter



Jan Morris, as witty, learned and enthusiastic a traveler as ever there was, died Friday, at least 24 years after selecting her tombstone.

Related posts

Palm Beach County looks to end Trump golf course lease after U.S. Capitol riot

Palm Beach County looks to end Trump golf course lease after U.S. Capitol riot

January 16, 2021
The popularity of coach holidays was highlighted this week when National Express announced that bookings made by those aged 65 and over had leapt by 185 per cent in the past fortnight year on year

Our guide to the best coach holidays in Britain and beyond 

January 16, 2021

She was 94, a devoted resident of Wales (where she died), a celebrated historian, journalist and transgender pioneer.

As obituaries around the world will note, she unlocked secrets of Venice and Trieste, Italy; Oxford, England; Spain; Hong Kong; Manhattan; Mt. Everest; and scores of other locations in dozens of volumes of history and travel.

Morris also served as an essayist for Rolling Stone magazine, wrote a trilogy on the rise of the British Empire and devoted an entire volume to a Mediterranean destination, Hav, that was eerily compelling and entirely imaginary.

“Jan was just so self-contained. She loved places and she loved people. But I don’t think she needed to have company to enjoy herself,” said Michael Shapiro, a Bay Area writer who interviewed Morris several times and included her in his 2004 book, “A Sense of Place.”

Added Shapiro: “Jan believed in everybody charting their own course. She certainly did. What a magnificent, indomitable life.”

By the time my wife, Mary Frances, and I met her in 1996, she looked and behaved like your favorite aunt. She was, as I wrote, a tall, white-haired woman, 69 years old, robust, quick with a quip and inclined to tear across the countryside at high speeds in her Honda Prelude.

“I find this landscape unmatchably beautiful,” she told us. “The scale of it! And how it changes every half-hour. I’m always comparing places to it.”

We’d come because I was writing a magazine story about Wales. When I wrote ahead to ask for a few moments of her time, she invited my wife and me to lunch at Portmeirion.

We were charmed, of course. Supreme self-confidence. No pretense. And the career of Jan Morris, we knew, was the second act in the writer’s story.

Morris was born James Morris, son of a Welsh father and English mother, studied at Oxford, served in the British Army and became a star reporter at the Times of London, a tenure that included a global scoop on Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay’s 1953 conquest of Mt. Everest. To get that scoop, Morris followed the great climber 20,000 feet up and sent a key message in code to keep the news exclusive.

Yet through all of those years, including marriage and fatherhood, Morris knew something was not quite right. As she later wrote:

“I was perhaps three or four years old when I realized I had been born into the wrong body, and should really be a girl.”

Those words come from “Conundrum,” the author’s 1974 account of the journey from manhood to transgender womanhood. That voyage included hormone treatment and an experimental operation in North Africa at a time when the term “transgender” was rarely heard.

From then on, through several more memoirs and many books of history and travel, the author was Jan, not James. And the words were sharp as diamonds.

Here she is on Las Vegas in the 1980s: “Las Vegas sometimes reminds me of the terrible little towns of inner Sicily or Sardinia, where half of the population consists of murderers, kidnappers or extortionists, and the other half pretends not to notice.”

On La Paz, Bolivia: “It is a tumultuous, feverish, often-maddening, generally harum-scarum kind of place, but nobody with an eye to country or a taste for drama could fail to respond to its excitements, or resist the superb improbability of its situation.”

And there’s this on Trieste: “There are people everywhere who form a Fourth World, or a diaspora of their own. They are the lordly ones. They come in all colours. They can be Christians or Hindus or Muslims or Jews or pagans or atheists. They can be young or old, men or women, soldiers or pacifists, rich or poor. They may be patriots, but are never chauvinists. They share with each other, across all the nations, common values of humour and understanding. When you are among them you will not be mocked or resented, because they will not care about your race, your faith, your sex or your nationality, and they suffer fools if not gladly, at least sympathetically. They laugh easily. They are easily grateful. They are never mean. They are not inhibited by fashion, public opinion or political correctness. They are exiles in their own communities, because they are always in a minority, but they form a mighty nation, if they only knew it. It is the nation of nowhere, and I have come to believe that its natural capital is Trieste.”

After our lunch at Portmeirion, Morris asked us to join her at the 18th century farmhouse she shared with her partner (previously her wife), Elizabeth, who survives her.

There, Morris told us that her father was Welsh, her mother English; but she’d always identified with the Welsh half. In fact, she confessed, in the early 1990s, in a ceremony rich with flowing robes and Druid overtones, Morris had been installed as a bard of the Gorsedd, the most prominent cultural organization in Wales.

Over tea, Jan and Elizabeth talked about the adventures of their grown children, the kite-flying of a grandchild, the resurgence of the Welsh language.

“All these things are happening,” Morris said. “And all these people who speak only English have no idea they’re happening.”

I think one of us said that for somebody in the business of going away, she seemed partial to home.

Always a believer in bold gestures, Jan couldn’t resist telling us about the gravestone she’d already had chiseled for them. They kept it beneath the stairs.

Atop her roof, meanwhile, Morris had placed a custom-made weather vane: Two of its compass points were labeled with characters from the English alphabet, two from the Welsh.

Continuing the tour, she led us along a path beneath oak, ash and sycamore trees, then paused for dramatic effect.

“Down here,” she announced with a wave of her arm, “is my grave. On a small island in the stream.”

May the island endure and the stream run.



Source by www.latimes.com

Share196Tweet123Share49
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

Van Morrison teams with Eric Clapton for anti-lockdown song

December 19, 2020
Sen. Rand Paul's ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was 'totally wasted'

Sen. Rand Paul’s ‘Festivus Report’ claims $54B in tax dollars was ‘totally wasted’

December 23, 2020
'Zombie' greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

‘Zombie’ greenhouse gas lurks in permafrost beneath the Arctic Ocean

December 24, 2020
"I think people are trying to replicate pre-COVID thrills," said Lindsey Metselaar, host of "We Met at Acme," a popular millennial dating podcast.

‘Cheating’ may mean something else entirely during the COVID-19 pandemic

0
Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

Fact check: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced he would defer his annual raise

0
Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country's no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

Swedish government sidelines epidemiologist who steered country’s no lockdown experiment as deaths rise

0
"I think people are trying to replicate pre-COVID thrills," said Lindsey Metselaar, host of "We Met at Acme," a popular millennial dating podcast.

‘Cheating’ may mean something else entirely during the COVID-19 pandemic

January 16, 2021
Archie Lyndhurst's mother reveals his cause of death: 'The results utterly floored us’

Archie Lyndhurst’s mother reveals his cause of death: ‘The results utterly floored us’

January 16, 2021
Palm Beach County looks to end Trump golf course lease after U.S. Capitol riot

Palm Beach County looks to end Trump golf course lease after U.S. Capitol riot

January 16, 2021
Daily illinois - USA | News, Sports & Updates Web Magazine

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap
  • Write For Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us Page
  • Contact
  • DMCA Policy
  • Home 1
  • Privacy Policy
  • Submit, Guest Post, Write For Us and Become a Contributor
  • Terms of Use

Copyright © 2020 Dailyillinois.com.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.