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lux
Armchair Traveler
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HOLY COW by Sarah MacDonald. I couldn't recommend this one more--she's hilarious, smart, and has incredible stories about her two years in India. Great book!
 
Posts: 39 | Location: keeps changing! | Registered: 04 January 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Holds PhD in Packing
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Kalashnikovs and Zoombie Cucumbers. Unfortunately, I've forgotten the name of the author and am lightyears from my bookshelves.

It's about travelling in Mozambique - a wonderful country!
 
Posts: 261 | Location: Norway | Registered: 28 July 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Curmudgeon (Moderator)
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by Nick Middleton

I have a copy. It's way out of print, but I recommend his others.
 
Posts: 16471 | Location: Richmond-by-the-Sea, California | Registered: 02 January 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Armchair Traveler
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Posts: 39 | Location: Phoenix | Registered: 14 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Knows What a Schengen Visa Is
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Lawrence Durrell's Mediterranean island books: Prospero's Cell, Bitter Lemons, Reflections on a Marine Venus, and Sicilian Carousel

Charles Macomb Flandrau's Viva Mexico!

Fanny Calderon de la Barca's Life in Mexico

Mark Twain's Innocents Abroad and Roughing It

Jim Paris
 
Posts: 466 | Location: Los Angeles, Calif | Registered: 16 July 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Thorn Tree Refugee
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Hi Wink

French Revolutions by Tim Moore. Cycling, outrageous French waiters, comedy and lots of chafing. A laugh out loud gem.

Arabia , formerly, Arabia through the Looking Glass by Jonathan Raban. Insightful and off-beam. A great introduction to the varied world of the Middle East even if it was written long before nine-eleven and the "War on Terror". Probably my favourite travel book of all time.
 
Posts: 4 | Location: London | Registered: 25 September 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
KPG
Street Food Connoisseur
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'McCarthy's Bar' for sure. Followed by 'Road to McCarthy'. Pete McCarthy is much missed.

Oh - and my travel diary from SEA - just re-read it tonight.

KPG


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'Even if you're on the right road, you will get run over if you just stand there'. - Will Rogers
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Posts: 614 | Location: Sydney, Australia | Registered: 10 January 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Holds PhD in Packing
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Paul Theroux is a good travel writer. The first one of his I read was called The Old Patagonian Express. He starts in Boston and goes all the way to the tip of Argentina. Good stuff!
 
Posts: 108 | Location: Portland, Oregon/Prague, CZ | Registered: 09 November 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Ct
Lost in Place
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I'm not saying its the best... but it's my favourite, is set in India, and can now be read here for free:
Chasing Rainbows in Chennai
 
Posts: 89 | Location: UK/India | Registered: 02 May 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Ct
Lost in Place
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If anyone would like a free electronic version of this book, laid out in book form in a pdf file, then mail me at colin@zine5.com and I'll oblige
 
Posts: 89 | Location: UK/India | Registered: 02 May 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Street Food Connoisseur
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Sometimes I like to read travel diaries and books from long ago - one of my favorites is "Our Hearts Were Young & Gay" by Cornelia Otis Skinner (daughter of Otis Skinner, a famous actor/director from the 20's) and Emily Kimbrough (mother of Charles Kimbrough of "Murphy Brown" fame). The book details their trip to Europe in the 1920's and is hysterical.

Another oldie but goodie is "Full Tilt" by Dervla Murphy, who traveled by bicycle from Ireland to India in the early 1960's. I read this book in high school and it was the first to give me the idea that you can travel close to the earth.


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Mardee

Travels in Turkey 2007
Easter in Italy

It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don't keep your feet, there's no knowing where you might be swept off to. ~J.R.R. Tolkien
 
Posts: 537 | Location: Ohio | Registered: 27 December 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Looking for the Signpost Up Ahead
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Try this one, if you are looking for a classic journey. A tougher woman, I can't imagine.

TRAVELS WITH MYSELF AND ANOTHER


The "another" is Ernest Hemingway, who she cajoles into going with her on one of her trips. Fantastic book
 
Posts: 3699 | Location: canada | Registered: 11 September 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Knows What a Schengen Visa Is
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I just read Holy Cow: An Indian Adventure and have to agree with Lux, a great read. I'm also going to vote for Honeymoon with My Brother, which is irresistibly touching unless your heart is a cold, hard, nugget.


“‘How does one become a butterfly?’ she asked pensively. ‘You must want to fly so much that you are willing to give up being a caterpillar.’”
- Trina Paulus

www.funchilde.com
 
Posts: 386 | Location: East Coast USA | Registered: 22 May 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Guidebook Dependent
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Vagabonding-Rolf Potts
On the Road-Jack Kerouac

These were two of the first traveling books that I have read, I obviously have a lot of catching up to do!
 
Posts: 17 | Location: USA | Registered: 03 January 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Armchair Traveler
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My favourite is Tiziano Terzani's "A Fortunate Teller Told Me".

The joint themes of this beautiful book are his decision not to fly for one year whilst employed as asian correspondent for Der Spiegel and the search for and meetings with famous or notorious fortune tellers in the places he visits.

I'm hoping that if loads of you buy it more of his work might be translated into English <nudge>.
 
Posts: 36 | Location: Montreal | Registered: 06 December 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Armchair Traveler
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Okay, so Round Ireland with a Fridge by Tony Hawks is my faorite too!

I also enjoyed;
Chasing Che by Patrick Symmes
Travels in a thin country by Sara Wheeler
The Fruit Palace by Charles Nicholl
and
Marching Powder by Rusty Young/Thomas McFadden


I'd honestly say that Marching Powder is a MUST READ!!!!!

Honorable Mentions go to Bad Times in Buenos Aires by Miranda France and In Patagonia by Bruce Chatwin.

Stay away from:

In the tomb of the inflatable pig by John Gilmette


Where there are bees, there is honey

- Winnie the Pooh
 
Posts: 30 | Location: Brooklyn, NY | Registered: 02 January 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Boondoggling Hornswoggler (Moderator)
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quote:
My favourite is Tiziano Terzani's "A Fortunate Teller Told Me".


I love this book! I was nearly heartbroken when he passed away in 2004. He had such wonderfully gentle and profound insight. I also really liked 'Goodnight Mr. Lenin' and 'Behind the Forbidden Door.' What I would really like to see is a translation of 'Another Turn of the Merry Go Round,' which is the story of his battle with cancer.

Of a different feather, I enjoy Redmond O'Hanlon's writings, especially 'In Trouble Again' and 'No Mercy.' Few other people, while in the middle of danger and certain intestinal upsets, can believably convey their excitement over spotting new and as-of-yet-recorded fauna.
 
Posts: 2803 | Location: Out on the back forty | Registered: 23 September 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Street Food Connoisseur
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Just got finished reading "Eat, Pray, Love" by Elizabeth Gilbert and loved it - one woman's odyssey to Italy, India and Indonesia.


______________________________________________
Mardee

Travels in Turkey 2007
Easter in Italy

It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don't keep your feet, there's no knowing where you might be swept off to. ~J.R.R. Tolkien
 
Posts: 537 | Location: Ohio | Registered: 27 December 2006Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Armchair Traveler
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Okay, I've got a brand new recommendation!!!

Diane Thiel's

The White Horse: A Colombian Journey

So far so great! I'm only 66 pages in thus far, but here's my favorite passage:

quote:
And here, in Jaqué, with all this lush vegetation around us, Miguel kept insisting that toilet paper couldn't possibly come from trees. "They wouldn't cut a tree down to make toilet paper," he said.
I didn't blame him for disbelieving. It doesn't make sense to me either. As we went back and forth, and I said again, "Believe me, it's true," a little girl who was standing nearby, listening, looked over and piped up, "No, it isn't. It comes from Panama City."


Where there are bees, there is honey

- Winnie the Pooh
 
Posts: 30 | Location: Brooklyn, NY | Registered: 02 January 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Thorn Tree Refugee
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Chatwin, of course

Some others that haven't been mentioned:
Rory Stewart's The Places In Between- One of my favorite books of the last few years, let alone travel-related. Open-minded yet shrewd with a firm grasp of the history and culture of Afghanistan. I can't wait to read his other book, The Prince of the Marches about his experience as a provincial governor in post-invasion Iraq.

most anything by Robert D. Kaplan (The Ends of the Earth, Balkan Ghosts, Surrender or Starve, plenty of others) - Mixes excellent travel obeservation with keen political and historical analysis. Probably my favorite journalist working today.

Peter Fleming's Brazilian Adventure and News From Tartary - The brother of Ian, Fleming injects a great dark wit into his stories. Great if you appreciate misadventure.

Tété-Michel Kpomassie's An African in Greenland - Hailing from Togo, Kpomassie pursued a childhood ambition to see Greenland. His experiences among the Inuit are a massively entertaining case study of culture clash that is ultimately quite touching.

just a few recent favorites-- truly great travel writing and reportage is a recent passion of mine
 
Posts: 3 | Location: Florida | Registered: 05 February 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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