In the late 1940s Patrick Leigh Fermor, now widely regarded as one of
the twentieth century's greatest travel writers, set out to explore the
then relatively little-visited islands of the Caribbean. Rather than a
comprehensive political or historical study of the region, The
Traveller's Tree, Leigh Fermor's first book, gives us his own vivid,
idiosyncratic impressions of Guadeloupe, Martinique, Dominica, Barbados,
Trinidad, and Haiti, among other islands. Here we watch Leigh Fermor
walk the dusty roads of the countryside and the broad avenues of former
colonial capitals, equally at home among the peasant and the elite, the
laborer and the artist. He listens to steel drum bands, delights in the
Congo dancing that closes out Havana's Carnival, and observes vodou and
Rastafarian rites, all with the generous curiosity and easy erudition
that readers will recognize from his subsequent classic accounts A Time
of Gifts and Between the Woods and the Water.