Alexandra Fuller:
Travel Light, Move Fast, Penguin Press (Penguin Random House USA)
9781984879219, paperback

She is
witty, brutally honest with herself and her family (no wonder her family call
her books these “awful books” and hope she stops writing), her emotions raw
when she writes; she made me laugh out loud and also had me crying many
times. “Travel Light, Move Fast” is no
exception, it is brilliant. It is a document to her unforgettable character of
a father who died suddenly aged 82 during a trip with her mother to Budapest. The book is homage to his life philosophy,
the man himself who was the black sheep of a wealthier English family and his marriage
to her mother Nicola who was raised on a farm in Kenya. Alexandra Fuller weaves back and forth masterfully between her days spent at her dying fathers bed site and memories of
him and their family life in Africa, his misadventures and failures, forever resilient never giving up but just
moving on to another place. At times I asked myself how much loss and misery a
person can endure and still come out optimistic. Her accounts of what it
was like growing up in such circumstance with her sister Vanessa kept me glued. She loved and adored her
father but never overlooked his flaws. The
loss of him becomes surreal when her ailing mother and Bobo, as she is
called by her parents, have to fly home to their farm to Zambia with her father’s
ashes on their laps. The second half of
the book is called ”The Widows Farm” dealing with her and her mother’s grief trying
to carry on as a family on their Zambian farm without her level headed father holding the entire
family together. When she returns to Wyoming to her own family, his loss becomes even more unbearable. But nothing prepared me for her rawest grief and shock at the end of the book, tears rolling down my face
reading.
It is one
of the finest accounts of a very unusual family, life and love of family I have
ever read. This book will stick with me for a while, I hope she never stops
writing.