Fraser begins each essay with an autobiographical passage before turning to the place and moment at hand. This technique establishes camaraderie with our learned, informative, and entertaining guide as we walk deserts and frozen plains, Old World neighborhoods and Far Eastern danger zones, the lobbies of plush new hotels and the aisles of centuries-old cathedrals. In his ruminations, Fraser circles strategically between personal and global pastsatraveling in time as well as spaceato put our modernity in perspective and to ponder facets of human experience found amid the regions he describes so vividly. The heart of Fraseras memoir is a two-chapter sequence devoted to meandering through his ancestral homeland of Scotland, a narrative that ably couples family history and travelogue. In the concluding essay, the authoras adventure in Antarctica parallels a trip taken decades earlier by his great-grandfather Alexander V. Fraser, the first commander of the U.S. Coast Guard, and again he deftly juxtaposes the personal with the global and the past with the present.
Fraseras tales are peppered with the anecdotes, asides, and well-chosen quotations of a traveler steeped in knowledge of the worldas history and its literature. From China to Peru is a welcoming invitation to traverse the globe, if only through the insightful memories of one well-versed in such passages.