John Oldale

Esquimau_iglouUn tour du monde insolite pour découvrir en s’amusant les modes de vie et l’histoire de plus 190 pays.
Où a-t-on pour la 1re fois résolu un crime à l’aide d’empreintes digitales ?
Pourquoi est-il si malvenu de mourir à 81 ans au Bhutan ?
Connaissez-vous le code secret utilisé par les cambrioleurs en France ?
Et le mot allemand le plus long, quel est-il, avec ses 67 lettres ?
Savez-vous que Luanda est la ville la plus chère au monde ?
Que l’espèce la plus représentée sur notre planète est le krill ?
Qu’en chauffant de la téquila pure à 800°c on obtient du diamant iglooooopur ?
Les esquimaux font-ils des livres ?
Anecdotes historiques, culturelles, politiques, mélange d’informations sérieuses et cocasses, ces miscellanées sans frontières guident le lecteur aux quatre coins du globe et jusqu’au coeur des pays les plus méconnus, pour découvrir l’âme et l’histoire des peuples du monde.

2 thoughts on “John Oldale

  1. shinichi Post author

    There is a sprinkling of facts that I came across directly in my travels – the mysterious stone balls that litter Costa Rica for example, or the fact that Belorussian children have their appendices removed to provide live subjects for medical students to practice on. But much more significantly, my travels were key to guiding me in the sorts of questions to ask in approaching each country.

    Obviously, I chose facts that I thought would be entertaining or eye-opening, but, given this, I consciously tried to paint a picture of each country that mirrored my perception of the reality. So, for China, I wanted to capture the immense antiquity, the self-sufficiency, and the sheer gulf between Western culture and traditions and those at play in China. At the same time, I am firmly convinced that if the 19th century belonged to Europe and the 20th to America, the 21st belongs to China – and I wanted to make sure that my coverage highlighted this.

    The map showing Zheng He’s 15th century voyages of exploration alongside the modern Chinese ‘string of pearls’ theorem in its projection of naval power into the Indian Ocean is a case in point. In doing all of this, I drew very extensively on my experiences of the country when I travelled solo there for 100 days in the 1980s (on several occasions being the first westerner to visit an area since WWII).

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