 
Patrick Leigh Fermor recounts the last leg of his epic walk across Europe as he makes his way through Bulgaria, Romania, and finally Greece. 
In the winter of 1933, eighteen-year-old Patrick (“Paddy”) Leigh Fermor  set out on a walk across Europe, starting in Holland and ending in  Constantinople, a trip that took him almost a year. Decades later, Leigh  Fermor told the story of that life-changing journey in A Time of Gifts and Between the Woods and the Water, two books now celebrated as among the most vivid, absorbing, and beautifully written travel books of all time.
The Broken Road is  the long-awaited account of the final leg of his youthful adventure  that Leigh Fermor promised but was unable to finish before his death in  2011. Assembled from Leigh Fermor’s manuscripts by his prizewinning  biographer Artemis Cooper and the travel writer Colin Thubron, this is  perhaps the most personal of all Leigh Fermor’s books, catching up with  young Paddy in the fall of 1934 and following him through Bulgaria and  Romania to the coast of the Black Sea. Days and nights on the road,  spectacular landscapes and uncanny cities, friendships lost and found,  leading the high life in Bucharest or camping out with fishermen and  shepherds–in the The Broken Road such incidents and escapades are  described with all the linguistic bravura, odd and astonishing  learning, and overflowing exuberance that Leigh Fermor is famous for,  but also with a melancholy awareness of the passage of time, especially  when he meditates on the scarred history of the Balkans or on his  troubled relations with his father. The book ends, perfectly, with  Paddy’s arrival in Greece, the country he would fall in love with and  fight for. Throughout it we can still hear the ringing voice of an  irrepressible young man embarking on a life of adventure.