Isolarion takes its title from a type of fifteenth-century map that isolates an area in order to present it in detail, and that’s just what James Attlee does here for Cowley Road in
Oxford. The former site of a leper hospital, a workhouse, and a medieval well said to have miraculous healing powers, Cowley Road has little to do with the dreaming spires of the
tourist’s or student’s Oxford.
From a sojourn in a sensory-deprivation tank to a furtive visit to an unmarked pornography emporium, the sharp-eyed Attlee investigates every aspect of the Cowley
Road’s appealingly eclectic culture, where halal shops jostle with craft jewelers and nightclubs pulsate alongside quiet churchyards.
Drawing inspiration from sources ranging from Robert Burton’s The Anatomy of Melancholy to contemporary art, Attlee is a charming and congenial guide who revels
in the extraordinary embedded in the everyday. Isolarion is at once a road movie, a quixotic stand against uniformity, and a rousing hymn in praise of the complex, invigorating nature of
the twenty-first-century city.
“Attlee paints an iridescent picture of a new Oxford that no guide book has yet captured.”—Richard B. Woodward, New York
Times
“A gem. . . . James Attlee's scholarly, reflective and sympathetic journey up the Cowley Road . . . blends a vivid account of daily life, fluid and
unsettling, in a modern British town with powerful allegorical reflections on the connections between past and present, time and space, and high culture and the hard scrabble world that
sustains it.”—Economist
“The attraction, for Attlee, is that the Cowley Road ‘is both unique and nothing special’; the resulting book is
unique and very special. . . . Residents of East Oxford can be proud to have this eccentric advocate and eloquent explorer in their midst.”—Geoff Dyer, Guardian