Synopsis
A “stylish and engaging…fearlessly honest account” (Financial Times) of man’s love of drink, and an insightful meditation on the meaning of alcohol consumption across cultures worldwide
Drinking alcohol: a beloved tradition, a dangerous addiction, even “a sickness of the soul” (as once described by a group of young Muslim men in Bali). In his wide-ranging travels, Lawrence Osborne—a veritable connoisseur himself—has witnessed opposing views of alcohol across cultures worldwide, compelling him to wonder: is drinking alcohol a sign of civilization and sanity, or the very reverse? Where do societies and their treatment of alcohol fall on the spectrum between indulgence and restraint?
These questions launch the author on an audacious journey, from the Middle East, where drinking is prohibited, to the West, where it is an important—yet perhaps very often a ruinous—part of everyday life. Beginning in the bar of a luxury hotel in Milan, Osborne then ventures to the Hezbollah-threatened vineyards of Lebanon; a landmark pub in London; the dangerous drinking dens on the Malaysian border; the only brewery in the alcohol-hostile country of Pakistan; and Oman, where he faces the absurd challenge of finding a bottle of champagne on New Year’s Eve. Amid his travels, Osborne unravels the stories of alcoholism in his own family, and reflects on ramifications of alcohol consumption in his own life.
An immersing, controversial, and often irreverent travel narrative, The Wet and the Dry offers provocative, sometimes unsettling insights into the deeply embedded conflicts between East and West, and the surprising influence of drinking on the contemporary world today.
Table of Contents
CONTENTS
Gin and Tonic
A Glass of Arak in Beirut
Fear and Loathing in the Bekaa
Lunch with Walid Jumblatt
The Ally Pally
England, Your England
The Pure Light of High Summer
New Year’s in Muscat
The Little Water
My Sweet Islamabad
Bars in a Man’s Life
Getting a Drink in a Civil War
Usquebaugh
East into West
Twilight at the Windsor Hotel
About Lawrence Osborne
Photo © Ine Gundersveen
Lawrence Osborne is the author of one previous novel,
Ania Malina, and six books of nonfiction, including the memoir
Bangkok Days. His journalism and short stories have appeared in the
New York Times Magazine, the
New Yorker,
Newsweek,
Forbes,
Tin House,
Harper’s,
Conde Nast Traveler, and many other publications. Osborne has led a nomadic life, residing for years in France, Italy, Morocco, the United States, Mexico, and Thailand. He currently lives in Istanbul.
Praise
“Instantly among the best nonfiction volumes about drinking that we have…Mr. Osborne comes across in The Wet and the Dry as a real human being indeed — a complicated man mixing complicated feelings into fizzy, adult, intoxicating prose.”-New York Times
"Osborne is a master of the high style." -The Guardian
"Captivating...Stylish and engaging." -Financial Times
"Osborne elicits some profound and harrowing reflections...From Dubai to Beirut, Islamabad to Brooklyn, Osborne’s meditations on fermentation and distillation induce a host of refreshing, taut, timeless unmoorings." -Publishers Weekly (starred review)