- Home
- Store Info
- Events
- Local Authors
- Newsletter
- Our Bestsellers
- Recommendations
- Bookseller Picks
- Alexa recommends
- Allison recommends
- Barry recommends
- Betty recommends
- Bill recommends
- Deb recommends
- Emma recommends
- Gillian recommends
- Gwenyth recommends
- Jane recommends
- Jessica recommends
- Kym recommends
- Lisa recommends
- Lorna recommends
- Margaret recommends
- Marilyn recommends
- Mayre recommends
- Melinda recommends
- Pete recommends
- Rebecca recommends
- Sally recommends
- Top Sellers of 2012
- ARC Reviewer Program
- Bookseller Picks
Their Heads Are Green and Their Hands Are Blue: Scenes from the Non-Christian World (Paperback)
Please email or call for availability and price
Special Order - Subject to Availability
Description
Their Heads are Green and their Hands are Blue is an engaging collection of eight travel essays. Except for one essay on Central America, all of these pieces are concerned with locations in the Hindu, Buddhist, or Islamic worlds. A superb and observant traveler, Paul Bowles was a born wanderer who found pleasure in the inaccessible and who cheerfully endures the concomitant hardships with a matter-of-fact humor.
These essays provide us with Paul Bowles' characteristic insightfulness and bring us closer to a world we frequently hear about, but often find difficult to understand.
About the Author
Paul Bowles was born in Queens, New York, in 1910. He began his travels as a teenager, setting off for Paris, telling no one of his plans. In 1930 he visited Morocco for the first time, with Aaron Copland, with whom he was studying music. His early reputation was as a composer and he wrote the scores for several Tennessee Williams plays. Bowles married the writer Jane Auer in 1938, and after the war the couple settled in Tangier. In Morocco Bowles turned principally to fiction. The Sheltering Skyinspired by his travels in the Saharawas a New York Times bestseller in 1950, and has gone on to sell more than 250,000 copies. It was followed by three further novels, numerous short stories, nonfiction, and translations. Bowles died in Tangier in 1999.




