Flip van Doorn
Author of Nederland 1000 plekken die je écht gezien moet hebben
About the Author
Works by Flip van Doorn
De Ronde Van België 1 copy
Associated Works
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Doorn, Flip van
- Birthdate
- 1967
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- The Netherlands
- Country (for map)
- The Netherlands
- Birthplace
- Zeist, The Netherlands
- Occupations
- journalist
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Reviews
Lists
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 17
- Also by
- 2
- Members
- 58
- Popularity
- #284,346
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 15
- Languages
- 1
Flip van Doorn obviously feels a great affinity for Craandijk, with whom he not only has an occupation in common, but also a little bit of DNA - as he accidentally discovered whilst researching his family tree, his grandmother was a great-niece of Craandijk's. But more to the point, Craandijk was the pioneer - or at least first great populariser, which is what "pioneer" and "inventor" usually mean in practice - of wandering (rambling) as a pleasure in itself. He is not especially interested in covering distance or getting to a destination. Walking for him is all about what you experience on the way - discovering beauty in the landscape, understanding its history and ecology, lying on your back in the moss and looking up at the clouds, and so on. The walks Craandijk describes don't come with turn-by-turn instructions or a line on the map - it is all about following your nose and discovering stuff for yourself. And that's almost as radical a concept for us to take in nowadays as it was for Craandijk's early readers. We're so used to following coloured markers, leaflets, GPS routes and the rest and of having other people do the decision-making for us that it's almost scary to go out with nothing more than a general sense of what you want to see and where you can home from afterwards. But it can be very rewarding - I took a day in the middle of reading this book to wander, Craandijk-style, between Vorden and Zutphen, an area I hardly know at all. Very pleasant.
This isn't a biography or a condensed version of the Wandelingen - Van Doorn writes about Craandijk's background and career as a clergyman, writer and antiquary, about the process of writing and publication (crowd-sourcing and advertorial are clearly nothing new in the publishing world...), about the Netherlands as they were in the 1870s and as they are now, about Mennonites, about some of the places that interested Craandijk and how they are experienced by a modern walker, about preserving ancient buildings and re-establishing damaged landscapes ("re-meandering" is a big deal nowadays - and something I came across on the river Berkel on my "Craandijk walk"). It's a gloriously random and jumbled account of the experience of discovering and thinking about Craandijk - a mosaic, van Doorn calls it - with a lovely, frank listing in the last chapter of the bits and pieces that were left over unused at the end of the exercise. Re-meandering, indeed.
In some ways the 1870s were an ideal moment for Dutch walkers - for the first time, you could reach just about any point in the Netherlands quickly and in comfort by train, steam-tram or steamboat, but there were no bicycles or motor-cars to spoil things. But in other ways we have it so much better now - beautiful topographic maps on your phone (and all eight volumes of Craandijk as well if you want!), hundreds of former private parks are open to walkers, there are thousands of kilometres of marked circular walks, long-distance trails, node-point-routes, etc., there are information boards to explain anything rare or historic so that we don't overlook it, etc. And wherever you look there is someone busy re-meandering. But still, if we happen to end up on the wrong side of a Friesian canal nowadays, I wouldn't fancy our chances of finding a milkmaid to row us across...… (more)