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[
reviews ]
Far
Out
New York Times Book Review, March 23, 1997
By Ted Conover
PASS
THE BUTTERWORMS
Remote Journeys
Oddly Rendered.
By Tim Cahill.
283 pp. New York:
Villard Books. $24.
IF
you like the title, you will probably like the book. ''Pass the
Butterworms'' is Tim Cahill's fourth collection of travel journalism,
following ''Jaguars Ripped My Flesh,'' ''A Wolverine Is Eating My
Leg'' and ''Pecked to Death by Ducks.'' In an introduction, Mr.
Cahill laments that one recent reviewer, a ''nice lady writer who
lives back east somewhere,'' called the titles ''precious.'' Rather,
he explains, they are a joke that got started when he and some friends
were laying the groundwork for Outside magazine. The friends thought
the exotic travel stories he was proposing were the same kind found
in retro men's magazines, articles ''directed . . . at semiliterate,
semi-sad bachelors interested primarily in the 'nymphos' who, in
this genre, seemed to populate the jungles and mountains at the
various ends of the earth.'' They said Mr. Cahill would fail. These
titles are ''a poke in the eye with a sharp stick'' for those doubters,
as well as a wink at the old genre''A Wolverine Is Eating
My Leg'' was actually cribbed from a story in an old magazine called
Man's Adventure.
There
are no nymphos in Mr. Cahill's faraway lands (no butterworms that
I could find, either), but there is adventure and, most important,
there is Tim Cahill, with his winning, if corny, sense of humor.
He jets gamely around the world, filing columns to magazines like
Outside and Rolling Stone. He avoids politicsthe phrase ''third
world'' is never spokenand fancy hotels, and seems to prefer
being with a group. His humor tends to come at his own expense.
He describes in detail how, in calm waters off the gulf coast of
Baja California, he managed to capsize his sea kayak: ''When your
chair falls over backward, there is that awful jolt of disbeliefhow
could this possibly have happened to me?followed by a sincere
and fervent wish no one has seen you.'' On another kayak trip in
the Northwest, exploring the woods from a camp on the beach, he
falls backward off a pile of rocks and has to be medevacked out.
The
worst thing Mr. Cahill might call you is the Lady Who Stated the
Obvious or the Dreaded Couple Who Did Not Share My Political Opinions.
Still, some pieces are serious, and these, to my eye, are the best.
The strongest in the book, ''A Darkness on the River,'' describes
how a friend's son was murdered while floating a homemade wooden
raft down a wild river in Peru. Mr. Cahill accompanied the father
and an embassy official to the Indian region where the boy was killed.
The precise, dramatic way in which Mr. Cahill re-creates the incident,
and his sympathy for the boy's father, make you suspect, toward
the end, that this is more than just a horrifying story for Mr.
Cahill; he must be able to imagine the same thing happening to him.
One
of the pleasures of ''Pass the Butterworms,'' in fact, is learning
about the author piecemeal as you move from story to storyeverything
from his malaria to panic attacks following a failed romance. While
scuba diving, Mr. Cahill offers what seems an unintended metaphor
for his approach to travel: ''My stylethis compulsion to cover
a lot of territory, fastis called reef running.'' In a short
piece about the Indonesian province of Irian Jaya, he listens to
a missionary who is vexed because the local people refuse to wear
clothes. One man invites Mr. Cahill to dinner. Afterward, Mr. Cahill
sees how close the family members huddle together to keep warm,
and how happy this togetherness makes them. This he cites as an
example of ''family values in the raw.'' But the piece isn't over:
Mr. Cahill returns, in a rented car, to his hotel room, the lonely
travel writer owning up to the things he doesn't have. This serious
turn, almost an afterthought to the funny one, leaves the more lasting
impressionthe clown letting you into his dressing room after
the performance is over.
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