A Fortune-Teller Told Me: Earthbound Travels in the Far East
A Fortune-Teller Told Me: Earthbound Travels in the Far East book cover

A Fortune-Teller Told Me: Earthbound Travels in the Far East

Paperback – April 23, 2002

Price
$15.59
Format
Paperback
Pages
384
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0609809587
Dimensions
5.49 x 0.83 x 9.08 inches
Weight
1.05 pounds

Description

“Terzani’s thoughtful progression provides great pleasure because he is more open to the people, and people are always the real journey.” — Book Page “A marvelous traveling companion, Terzani entertains us with his reflections on subjects from astrology to political violence, from the depravity of Bangkok to the sterility of Singapore, and introduces us to the characters he meets along the way.” — O, The Oprah Magazine “An extraordinary and nuanced account of a journey through the Far East and Southeast Asia.” — Library Journal “Terzani’s thoughtful progression provides great pleasure because he is more open to the people, and people are always the real journey.” — Book Page “A marvelous traveling companion, Terzani entertains us with his reflections on subjects from astrology to political violence, from the depravity of Bangkok to the sterility of Singapore, and introduces us to the characters he meets along the way.” — O, The Oprah Magazine “An extraordinary and nuanced account of a journey through the Far East and Southeast Asia.” — Library Journal For thirty years, Tiziano Terzani has lived in Asia, reporting on its wars and revolutions as Far East correspondent of the German newsmagazine Der Spiegel. Born in Florence, he was educated in Europe and the United States. Since 1994 he has made New Delhi his base. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Life is full of opportunities. The problem is to recognize them when they present themselves, and that isn't always easy. Mine, for instance, had all the marks of a curse: "Beware! You run a grave risk of dying in 1993. You mustn't fly that year. Don't fly, not even once," a fortune-teller told me.It happened in Hong Kong. I had come across that old Chinese man by sheer chance. When I heard his dire words I was momentarily taken aback, but not deeply disturbed. It was the spring of 1976, and 1993 seemed a long way off. I did not forget the date, however; it lingered at the back of my mind, rather like an appointment one hasn't yet decided whether to keep or not.Nineteen seventy-seven . . . 1987 . . . 1990 . . . 1991. Sixteen years seem an eternity, especially when viewed from the perspective of Day One. But, like all our years (except those of adolescence), they passed very quickly, and in no time at all I found myself at the end of 1992. Well, then, what was I to do? Take that old Chinese man's warning seriously and reorganize my life? Or pretend it had never happened and carry on regardless, telling myself, "To hell with fortune-tellers and all their rubbish"?By that time I had been living in Asia solidly for over twenty years -- first in Singapore, then in Hong Kong, Peking, Tokyo, and finally in Bangkok -- and I felt that the best way of confronting the prophecy was the Asian one: not to fight against it, but to submit."You believe in it, then?" teased my fellow journalists -- especially the Western ones, the sort of people who are used to demanding a clear-cut yes or no to every question, even to such an ill-framed one as this. But we do not have to believe the weather forecast to carry an umbrella on a cloudy day. Rain is a possibility, the umbrella a precaution. Why tempt fate if fate itself gives you a sign, a hint? When the roulette ball lands on the black three or four times in a row, some gamblers count on statistical probability and bet all their money on the red. Not me: I bet on the black again. Has the ball itself not winked at me?And then, the idea of not flying for a whole year was an attraction in itself. A challenge, first and foremost. It really tickled me to pretend an old Chinese in Hong Kong might hold the key to my future. It felt like taking the first step into an unknown world. I was curious to see where more steps in the same direction would lead. If nothing else, they would introduce me, for a while, to a different life from the one I normally led. For years I have traveled by plane, my profession taking me to the craziest places on earth, places where wars are being waged, where revolutions break out or terrible disasters occur. Obviously I had held my breath on more than one occasion -- landing with an engine in flames, or with a mechanic squeezed in a trapdoor between the seats, hammering away at the undercarriage that was refusing to descend.If I had dismissed the prophecy and carried on flying in 1993, I would certainly have done so with more than the usual pinch of anxiety that sooner or later strikes all those -- including pilots -- who spend much of their lives in the air; but I would have carried on with my normal routine: planes, taxis, hotels, taxis, planes. That divine warning (yes: "divination," "divine," so alike!) gave me a chance -- in a way obliged me -- to inject a variant into my days. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “An utterly charming and engaging travel book that offers vivid portraits of unusual corners of Asia, told by a skilled raconteur whose eyes were open wide.” —
  • Los Angeles Times Book Review
  • Warned by a Hong Kong fortune-teller not to risk flying for an entire year, Tiziano Terzani—a vastly experienced Asia correspondent—took what he called “the first step into an unknown world. . . . It turned out to be one of the most extraordinary years I have ever spent: I was marked for death, and instead I was reborn.”Traveling by foot, boat, bus, car, and train, he visited Burma, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, China, Mongolia, Japan, Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia. Geography expanded under his feet. He consulted soothsayers, sorcerers, and shamans and received much advice—some wise, some otherwise—about his future. With time to think, he learned to understand, respect, and fear for older ways of life and beliefs now threatened by the crasser forms of Western modernity. He rediscovered a place he had been reporting on for decades. And reinvigorated himself in the process.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(115)
★★★★
25%
(96)
★★★
15%
(57)
★★
7%
(27)
23%
(88)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Prejudice is a blemish

This is a part travelogue, part social political commentary, and also sort of an assortment of methods of fortune telling in Asia. I have mixed feelings about this book. It is a good travelogue. Terzani paints vivid accounts of his encounters, what he sees, smells, feels and thinks. I enjoy the historic background he included about the places he visits. Terzani also provides some thought provoking insights about his view on history, humanity, economic and political development. He has interesting and rare interviews with a few people, including the drug lord Khun Sa. However, the credibility of this book suffers from his apparent condescension, selective belief and prejudice. For example, Terzani is openly critical of the desire and diligence of the Chinese to improve their life. He scorns globalisation and everything modern. He romantises living in a hot, humid, dirty and basic condition and criticises aspirations for more comfort. Granted that some ignorance of the Asian rulers have made the process of modernisation somewhat intrusive and destructive to their heritage and environment. A civilisation takes time to evolve and learn from mistakes. But Terzani fails to see the need or consequences if nothing is done instead. In his view, backwardness and poverty appear more deserving of celebration than success stories. He lacks objectivity and he chooses to believe more in the romantic versions and the underdogs. Some of his ideas are simply ridiculous and extreme. He proposes to isolate Cambodia from any external help and influences so as to let the country 'heals' on her own. Granted that globalisation is an enormous homogenising factor, but perhaps one should look closer at how to harness the good and minimise the bad instead of writing it off. Because of Terzani's long working and living experience in Asia that his words are believed to be credible and accurate, the more important it is to expose his selective information and prejudiced judgement.
10 people found this helpful
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Three and a half stars; somewhat fascinating

Tiziano Terzani's "A Fortune-Teller Told Me," deals with Terzani's travel in the Southeast and East Asia region solely by land because a fortune-teller that he met in Hong Kong told him that he should avoid travelling by air in the year 1993. That would be quite difficult considering Terzani's job as a journalist. Considering that as a challenge, Terzani travelled by trains, buses, and cargo ships which sometimes take days to arrive at his desired destination. In each of the countries or places that he visited, he would seek to find the local fortune-teller/shaman/sorcerer to learn about his fate and his life. Soon, Terzani learned that travelling by land despite its delays do have its benefits. He was able to take things at a leisure pace, learn more about the local people and cultures, and basically see sights that he would have otherwise missed if he was travelling by plane.

At the beginning of the book it was an interesting read for me. I like that Terzani includes anecdotes, personal accounts, and his meticulous observations of local communities. He proves to be very insightful in all the countries that he visited, including their political scenes. In order to know accuracy of what he said, you would have to be quite knowledgeable and aware of the politics in that region. But for other average readers, they may not be aware of such things. Hence, I would think the book is more solid if Terzani includes footnotes or bibliography which would be helpful. He frequently makes comments that are unsupported by any references or sources. In addition, I wish he would deal more with the local cultures as opposed to his obsession to find and consult every famous fortune-tellers in every places that he visited. It WAS interesting at the beginning but by the time he reached Mongolia, I was quite bored and have had enough of fortune-tellers. Lastly, like most reviewers here, I thought he was just like a "typical" Westerner who wants rural areas in Indo-China to be just the way they were, unaffected by globalization so that others like him could see the place in its "pristine" state. Not at all taking into consideration the poverty that these communities have to endure and how modernization would improve their lives tremendously. Hence, Terzani presented a very lopsided view of issues such as this. It is still a rather fascinating read, especially if you are into Buddhism, fortune-tellers, or the Southeast Asia region in general.
8 people found this helpful
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Angry and Mean-Spirited

Journalist Tiziano Terzani was told by a fortune teller in Hong Kong that he should avoid flying during the year 1993; any such flight, the seer warned, could have deadly consequences for him. Strangely, he received this warning not around the early nineties, but in 1976, and as the fateful year approached he mulled the prophecy over, finally deciding to heed the man's advice—more out of journalistic curiosity than anything—and take no air vehicles for an entire year. Instead, he took cars, trains, boats, and his own two feet all over the East, revealing a side of travel he had all but forgotten. This year of landbound voyages is the basis for his memoir "A Fortune-Teller Told Me," and it's a terrific premise; unfortunately, the book is spoiled by its own author.

A few major threads form Terzani's main concerns. There is the nature of travel: the question of whether what we have gained in convenience is worth what we have given up in experience. There is the spiritual: as he is on a journey initiated by a prophecy, Terzani resolves to seek out fortune-tellers wherever he goes, and see what they have to say about his future and whether they, too, think he is right to avoid air travel. (He receives a wild mixture of answers, and every mystic has new advice and a new prohibition for him.) Finally there are his reflections on modernity and "progress," which he sees almost without exception as a blight upon the world and a soulless destroyer of culture.

This final theme is by far the most prominent; unfortunately, it is also the least incisive. A lament about the modern world appears in almost every one of the book's twenty-seven chapters, usually in the form of Terzani's reminiscences about how a place was when he first visited, or how it has changed since it was depicted by some explorer centuries ago. Inevitably he finds the buildings ugly, the settings homogenous, the mass of humanity repulsive. His anger is relentless but repetitive, and grows tiresome after a few chapters.

Distaste for modern life is one thing; far uglier is Terzani's distaste for all those who participate in it. Though outwardly he acts cordially, his narration reveals a quiet contempt for almost everyone he meets. He speaks to a fellow Italian who became a Tibetan Buddhist monk; Terzani humors the man, but privately thinks he would have done better to stay home. A taxi driver who tries to strike up a conversation in Singapore is "intrusive" and "banal." The Chinese as a whole are "devastating," and Terzani describes them at every turn as "materialistic," for him an epithet as crude as any four-letter word. Sometimes he seems to hate people simply because they are trying to survive in the world as it is, rather than attempting to recreate the vanished past Terzani longs for.

For a man who spent decades in Asia, it seems Terzani never picked up one of the most basic tenets of the region's philosophy: that change is the only constant and clinging to an elusive past is a sure route to misery. For all his vitriol about the current system, Terzani offers precious little in the way of ideas for an alternative modernity that might preserve traditional cultures while allowing people to live comfortably. I am not saying the current Western-influenced program of modernity has no flaws or should not be critiqued; there are problems and we need voices of dissent. I am only disappointed that voice is so lacking in compassion as Terzani's.

~
7 people found this helpful
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Interesting but not compelling

The author literally walks us through his encounters with shamans, fortune-tellers, and sorcerers of the Asian continent. His pace is leisurely, and he makes plenty reflections in order to make out what he observes. Perhaps a bit too many, as by the end it feels repetitious. Later in the book the characters the author encounters do not particularly stand out from the ones he met earlier, nor does the author's insight deepen alongside his route. The book is, as with the majority of travel literature, of parallel structure, and its whole does not exceed the sum of its parts (chapters). I would have enjoyed the book better had the author included a heavier dose of social context, which the author should have had at his disposal given his occupation.
Overall the book is an enjoyable read, if you don't expect to learn too much from it.
6 people found this helpful
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Fascinating Travels Through Asia

Told by a fortune teller not to travel by plane during the year 1993, the author embarks on a journey throughtout Asia, to Italy and back the old fashioned way - by car, train, boat, motorcycle and foot. This is by necessity a leisurely trip and along the way the author makes contact with many locals both high and low born, as well as visiting many other fortune tellers. Local customs and beliefs are explored while he ruminates on what he believes to be the downfall of Asia - Western materialism. For a man whose home in Bangkok has been featured in Architectural Digest (which he proudly points out) this is hypocritical in the extreme. He bashes the Chinese at every turn for their drive to make money, showing his own prejudices. While spending much time decrying materialism he glosses over what happened to the Vietnamese after the Communist takeover in 1975. He notes that he cried with tears of joyousness after Saigon fell to the Communists. What does he have to say about what the Communists did to that country and others? For these reasons I can only give this book three stars.

On a sad note, having read this book in 2011 I went back and did some further research on the author. I was saddened to learn that he died of cancer at the age of 65, after being told by each fortunte teller he encountered that he would live to a ripe old age. So much for what the fortune tellers told him!
5 people found this helpful
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Wonderful book

I cannot express in mere words what this book has done to me. I am about 2/3 through it and really do not want the journey to end. It's not so much the fortune telling but Tiziano's perspective of people and his sorrow over the loss of traditions that are being replaced by "modernization," or Westernization. And what a shame, as he states in the book, losing these ways is like removing a page or chapter from the book of human knowledge, gone forever. He shows through the many shamans he meets, the rulers, the "common" people (like you and me), how these traditions are "weathering" as the West collides into the East, and it's not faring well. Those he meets are still practicing the ways of the earth, they still know our place in this world, this life, and how we fit within it rather than reign superiority over it, but many are dying off and their descendents are taken by westernization and are not interested in carrying on these traditions. The west has lost its ability to perform magic if you will, instead we cure illnesses with drugs that make companies rich rather than through meditation, herbal remedies, spiritual manipulation, knowledge we all once knew. And here in Asia, and in Africa, through the native people of the Americas, Australia, etc. where our old ways are still being practiced, we still have something we could take and bring back if we'd just recognize its value, a real treasure we are so fortunate to still have and one we must grasp before it is too late!

One reviewer here mentioned how all of the fortune tellers the author met predicted that he would live a long life, often stating he'd live well into his eighties, but he died a few years ago at the age of 65 from a brain tumor.

This is not the first time I've heard fortune tellers predict long lives only to be proved wrong when their subjects die much younger. I had a friend who visited a fortune teller for his 25th birthday. She was extremely accurate about his past and present as well as what she believed would be his future, much of which he had planned but never told her. She told him he would have a very long career in politics. My friend was killed in a car accident while riding in a taxi only 2 months later. Another friend told me while stationed in Haiti many years ago that he had his fortune told with a few of his army buddies. The fortune teller told everyone's fortune but when she got to one of the men, she refused to tell his fortune. He was killed a week later.

I don't know, perhaps it's all bunk or perhaps there are folks who can truly see into the future. It's just that maybe they see the future, but not all of them want to tell the truth about when that person will die. Why tell someone they will die young when you can give them hope that they will die old?

Tiziano does not have a specific perspective, he's open minded, but he pines for the old ways that he sees were more human, and contrary to what others have written here, he never states he either supports or opposes communism, he simply observes, loves individuals and people, wishes for the days when we could all be connected to the earth again, and each other in a spiritual way, and not for business. And he's open to all possibilities when it comes to spirituality, true spirituality, not the kind that too often is used to control people. He does not dismiss these religions outright, he only notices they always seem to appear as either a way to westernize a country (Christianity) or fight against that westernization (Islam), like polar opposites, but no real balance or the recognition of a people's true will.

Whatever your perspective, open your mind and take a wonderful journey with this man. You'll long for a time you may know or remember, or have heard of but wish you could experience too, a time that even existed here in the US for a spell.
4 people found this helpful
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As timely and as important as ever

It’s amazing how relevant and impactful this book written in 1997 continues to be. I just read it while traveling in Hanoi and Tokyo. Terzani’s descriptions of these two places were wonderful to read while I was in both cities. Tokyo hadn’t changed much from his time, but Hanoi was like night and day and told me just how far the city and the country had come in a quarter century. But the real meat of this book is the insights into who we are as humans and what it means to face our own mortality and the meaning of life. I loved this book and feel it’s a great read for everyone - whether you’re an armchair traveler or a National Geographic explorer!
3 people found this helpful
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Intersting read but sometimes inaccurate

This is a facinating travel story which details those accounts that one may not encounter without traveling with locals. However, parts of the story make me wonder if this is all a true journey or is it mixed with fancy fabrication. Besides, as an Asian I found a few parts of the culture story-telling is not totally true to local customs. Perhaps the author didn't learn it correctly at the first place. However, those are the very tiny parts of the story which itself offers exiting readings.
3 people found this helpful
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a thought-provoking book

Having just returned from the Asian countries of Tiziano's travels, I found his book fascinating. It delves into each country's spiritual philosophy and political history, while relating his personal experiences in these changing cultures. The fortune teller theme was very apropos: we had a guide leave our tour because it had been foretold by a fortune teller that the only propitious time to move his household during 2006 was between 8 and 9am on Jan. 18. What? That experience, and others, reaffirmed many of Tiziano's musings. Through his perspective, obviously honed by his journalistic career and personal beliefs, we see the effects of modernity on these countries, thus prompting us to reflect on our own country's gains and losses as we attempt to bring change to deeply-held belief systems in other parts of the world. This book gave me much to think about.
3 people found this helpful
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A fortune-teller told me

I read it first in Italian, the original language it was written. 'A fortune-teller told me' is an real life story, full of historical and cultural information. Very interesting, well written and very enriching! I would recommend to anyone traveling to the Far East to read it to fully understand the complexities of those cultures and make the most of their travel experience.
2 people found this helpful