 
Continuing the epic foot journey across Europe begun in A Time of Gifts, Patrick Leigh Fermor writes about walking from Hungary to the Balkans. 
The   journey that Patrick Leigh Fermor set  out on in 1933—to cross Europe   on foot with an emergency allowance of one pound  a day—proved so rich   in experiences that when much later he sat down to describe  them, they   overflowed into more than one volume. Undertaken as the storms of war    gathered, and providing a background for the events that were  beginning  to unfold  in Central Europe, Leigh Fermor’s still-unfinished  account of  his journey has  established itself as a modern classic. Between the Woods and the Water,  the second volume of a projected three, has garnered as many prizes as its celebrated  predecessor, A Time of Gifts.  
 The opening of the book finds Leigh  Fermor crossing the  Danube—at the  very moment where his first volume left off.  A detour to  the luminous  splendors of Prague is followed by a trip downriver to  Budapest,   passage on horseback across the Great Hungarian Plain, and a  crossing  of the Romanian  border into Transylvania. Remote castles,  mountain  villages, monasteries and towering  ranges that are the haunt  of bears,  wolves, eagles, gypsies, and a variety of sects  are all  savored in  the approach to the Iron Gates, the division between the  Carpathian   mountains and the Balkans, where, for now, the story ends.