Book description
This is a stimulating book of exploration, experience and
philosophical meditation. As always with Robinson, the writing is
exact and eloquent, the terrritory exciting. This is a book to cherish
and re-read, challenging, infuriating and satisfying in turn, with
nuggets of poetry glinting between the curves and planes of its ideas
- and passages of pure gold.' - Mary O'Malley , Irish Times 'A
marvellous writer - there are multifarious pleasures contained in the
11 essays.' - Eamon Sweeney, Sunday Tribune In an essay from 1996
collecton Setting Foot on the Shores of Connemara and Other Essays,
Tim Robinson noted that 'we are spatial entities Â- which is even more
basic than being physical entities, subject to the law of gravity'. In
this dazzling new series of essays Robinson examines aspects of his
own 'time in space', moving from his childhood in Yorkshire, to a
deadly moment on a Malayan airstrip, a pilgrimage to the midnight sun,
adventures in the art-worlds of Istanbul, Vienna and London, and
finally to the spaces of the West of Ireland which he has interpreted
with incomparable attention and fidelity over the past three decades.
The essays explore problems in mathematics and mapping, the human
implications of the arc of a missile the feelings of a sceptic upon
approaching divine ground in the company of a mystic, and other
encounters of the empirical with the numinous: Robinson has an uncanny
capacity to write convincingly about both. The sequence ends with an
angry outburst against the continuing destruction of the Irish
countryside and a moving hymn to the delights of his own house and
garden at the edge of the sea in Connemara. My Time in Space is the
latest instalment in a literary corpus of singular integrity and
endless fascination. Tim Robinson was born in England in 1935. Stones
of Aran: Pilgrimage, published in 1985, won the Irish Book Award
Literature Medal and a Rooney Prize Special Award for Literature in 1987.
Tim Robinson, map-maker and writer, was born in England in 1935. He
studied mathematics at Cambridge and worked as a teacher and artist in
Istanbul, Vienna and London. In 1972 he moved to the West of Ireland and
began writing and making maps. He now lives in Roundstone, Connemara,
where he runs the Folding Landscapes studio with his wife Máiréad.