Book description
'I believe I shall be writing home about this trip for the rest of
my life... years from now, still recollecting, like an old white
hunter, shadowy images to an empty fireplace, far into the night...'
All the Time in the World, a first work of prose by the poet Hugo
Williams, was originally published in 1966 and commemorates Williams'
effort at age 21 to 'travel the world': the Middle East, India,
South-East Asia, Japan and Australia. Rich with striking and vivid
perceptions of people and places and perilous forms of transport, the
account also finds Williams acquiring precious life-experience, even
as the setting moves from the self-evident 'poem' of India's landscape
to barren, petrified Northern Australia. In Calcutta Williams looks up
the great Satyajit Ray through the telephone book. In Thailand he
meets a girl at a dance-hall, moves into her sunny flat, contemplates
staying. But to England he will return, albeit by the most
unexpectedly arduous leg of his amazing journey.