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As a teacher of
English literature, Jamie Zeppa would understand how the story
of her journey into Bhutan could be fit into the convenient box
of "coming-of-age romance," a romance with a landscape, a
people, a religion, and a dark, irresistible student. An
innocent, young Catholic woman from a Canadian mining town who
had "never been anywhere," Zeppa signed up for a two-year stint
teaching in a remote corner of the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan.
Despite the initial shock of material privation and such minor
inconveniences as giardia, boils, and leeches, Zeppa felt
herself growing into the vast spaces of simplicity that opened
up beyond the clutter of modern life. Alongside her burgeoning
enchantment, a parallel realization that all was not right in
Shangri-La arose, especially after her transfer to a college
campus charged with the politics of ethnic division. Still she
maintained her center by devouring the library's Buddhist tracts
and persevering in an increasingly fruitful meditation practice.
When the time came for her to leave, she had undergone a
personal transformation and found herself caught between two
worlds that were incompatible and mutually incomprehensible.
Zeppa's candid, witty account is a spiritual memoir, a travel
diary, and, more than anything, a romance that retraces the
vicissitudes of ineluctable passion. |