27 May 2015
In his book History, Politics and Dreams, which is just about to be published, Yannis Andricopoulos, co-founder of Skyros, the first ever learning holiday, traces the origins of the concept and its development over the years. Skyros, established in 1979, has pioneered new trends not only in the field of personal development but also in the holiday world. See www.skyros.com.
The book, classified as literary nonfiction, takes the reader on a journey through history, politics and ideas on the strength of the narrator's personal experiences in Greece and England, the countries he views respectively as mother and wife.
Factually accurate, the story is an engaging tale of dreams and doubts, illusions and disillusionment, hope and despair that turns from page one into a compelling, vivid and dramatic account of the conflicting priorities and values that shape our lives.
A part of this story is taken up with people such as ex-king Constantine, Margaret Thatcher, James Callaghan, Thabo Mbeki, Indira Gandhi, Turgut Ozal, Constantinos Karamanlis, Andreas Papandreou, Giscard D'Estaing and many other leading figures whom the narrator met over the years as a journalist.
Leaving history behind, the story moves into the quandaries of our post-faith, post-ideology
and post-everything world. Impelled by feelings of excitement and frustration, joy and anger or, in the case of Greece, mirth and gloom, it also highlights the need for a new, radical vision to help us resist the dispiriting cynicism of our times and face the future with confidence.
This conclusion leads the storyteller to the Greek island of Skyros where several hundred European question and challenge every year our culture's assumptions and confirm their commitment to the fundamental human priorities and values. It is what has made Skyros a totally unique holiday experience and a leader in the field of an ethically-rooted lifestyle. In the heart of his own thesis is the belief that the creation of a decent society is not the job of the state but of each one of us.
'Yannis' honest, engaging and flamboyant voice', one reviewer said, makes this book 'an immensely readable work'. It is written, another reviewer stated, with the 'clarity and sophistication of a genius', an assessment that reminded another reviewer of some other books 'deservedly seen as great'. 'Every paragraph', another pointed out, 'contains a thought-provoking phrase'.
Yannis has published eight non-fiction books – four in Greece and another four in the UK. See http://yannisandricopoulos.com/index.html
If you would like a copy of this book for review purposes, please let us know. Extracts can be published with the author's agreement.