The Best Travel Writing, Volume 10: True Stories from Around the World: Best Travel Writing, cartea 10
Autor James OReillyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 dec 2013
The Best Travel Writing, Volume 10 is the latest in this Travelers' Tales series launched in 2004 to celebrate the world's best travel writing — from Nobel Prize winners to emerging new writers. The points of view and perspectives are global, and themes encompass high adventure, spiritual growth, romance, hilarity and misadventure, service to humanity, and encounters with exotic cuisines and cultures. Includes winners from the annual Solas Awards for Best Travel Writing.
With an Introduction by Don George.
In The Best Travel Writing, Volume 10, readers will:
With an Introduction by Don George.
In The Best Travel Writing, Volume 10, readers will:
- Hunt for buried silver on a first visit to the Russian homeland
- Rejuvenate 40-something sex appeal on a dance floor in Cuba
- Rediscover the meaning of friendship in a roadside encounter in Namibia
- Fall in love and out again with the many Marcos of Rome
- Comprehend the meaning of forgiveness with a killing fields survivor in Cambodia
- Beat cancer by embracing travel and the world...and much more
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781609520878
ISBN-10: 1609520874
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 135 x 203 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Travelers' Tales Guides
Seria Best Travel Writing
ISBN-10: 1609520874
Pagini: 344
Dimensiuni: 135 x 203 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Travelers' Tales Guides
Seria Best Travel Writing
Cuprins
Publisher’s Preface
James O’Reilly
Introduction
Don George
Friends Who Don’t Bite
Jill K. Robinson
NAMIBIA
The Vanishing Art of Losing Your Way
Sarah Colleen Coury
USA
The Marco Chronicles: To Rome, Without Love
Elizabeth Geoghegan
ITALY
What Is that Thing?
Michael Coolen
THE GAMBIA
Inside the Tower
Keith Skinner
CALIFORNIA
Notes into Lines
Hannah Sheldon-Dean
CZECH REPUBLIC
Into the Hills
Matthew Crompton
INDIA
Show Me, Shouyu
Kelly Luce
JAPAN
Fish Trader Ray
Lisa Alpine
COLOMBIA
My First Trip to the Homeland
Tania Amochaev
RUSSIA
The Tea in Me
Bill Giebler
INDIA
Code 500
Stephanie Elizondo Griest
TEXAS
Diego Forever
Kelly Chastain
SPAIN
Woman Rain
Katherine Jamieson
GUYANA
The Crap Between the Love and Us
Dayna Brayshaw
AT SEA
Neil and I
Gary Buslik
EUROPE
From the Ashes
James Michael Dorsey
CAMBODIA
Ohio House Tour
V. Hansmann
OHIO
I Have a Problem with the Blood of a Woman
Stephanie Glaser
PARIS
Surfing the Millennia
Jeff Greenwald
UTAH
Feliz Cumpleaños
Lavinia Spalding
CUBA
Biko
Ken Matusow
SOUTH AFRICA
Storykeepers
Erin Byrne
PARIS
In Search of Dylan Thomas
Michael Shapiro
WALES
Found
Ben Aultman-Moore
SLOVAKIA
Southern Sandstone
Jessica Normandeau
KENTUCKY
The Bloom of Cancer
Amy Gigi Alexander
USA, PARIS
The Lapham Longshot
Peter Valing
NEW YORK CITY
Into the Cold
Marcia DeSanctis
SWEDEN
Acknowledgments
About the Editors
James O’Reilly
Introduction
Don George
Friends Who Don’t Bite
Jill K. Robinson
NAMIBIA
The Vanishing Art of Losing Your Way
Sarah Colleen Coury
USA
The Marco Chronicles: To Rome, Without Love
Elizabeth Geoghegan
ITALY
What Is that Thing?
Michael Coolen
THE GAMBIA
Inside the Tower
Keith Skinner
CALIFORNIA
Notes into Lines
Hannah Sheldon-Dean
CZECH REPUBLIC
Into the Hills
Matthew Crompton
INDIA
Show Me, Shouyu
Kelly Luce
JAPAN
Fish Trader Ray
Lisa Alpine
COLOMBIA
My First Trip to the Homeland
Tania Amochaev
RUSSIA
The Tea in Me
Bill Giebler
INDIA
Code 500
Stephanie Elizondo Griest
TEXAS
Diego Forever
Kelly Chastain
SPAIN
Woman Rain
Katherine Jamieson
GUYANA
The Crap Between the Love and Us
Dayna Brayshaw
AT SEA
Neil and I
Gary Buslik
EUROPE
From the Ashes
James Michael Dorsey
CAMBODIA
Ohio House Tour
V. Hansmann
OHIO
I Have a Problem with the Blood of a Woman
Stephanie Glaser
PARIS
Surfing the Millennia
Jeff Greenwald
UTAH
Feliz Cumpleaños
Lavinia Spalding
CUBA
Biko
Ken Matusow
SOUTH AFRICA
Storykeepers
Erin Byrne
PARIS
In Search of Dylan Thomas
Michael Shapiro
WALES
Found
Ben Aultman-Moore
SLOVAKIA
Southern Sandstone
Jessica Normandeau
KENTUCKY
The Bloom of Cancer
Amy Gigi Alexander
USA, PARIS
The Lapham Longshot
Peter Valing
NEW YORK CITY
Into the Cold
Marcia DeSanctis
SWEDEN
Acknowledgments
About the Editors
Recenzii
"The Travelers' Tales series is altogether remarkable." —Jan Morris
Notă biografică
James O'Reilly, publisher of Travelers’ Tales, and Larry Habegger, executive editor, have worked as series editors on more than 125 Travelers’ Tales/Solas House titles, winning many awards for excellence. Larry also writes a syndicated newspaper column, "World Travel Watch," which has appeared nationwide since 1985. James and Larry live with their families in the San Francisco Bay Area. Sean O’Reilly is coeditor of many Travelers' Tales books and the author of How to Manage Your DICK: Redirect Sexual Energy and Discover Your More Enlightened, Evolved Self.
Extras
Introduction
Immersed in the Mud of Life
By Don George
I’ve finally decided to unpack my hiking shoes. About a month ago I returned from a week-long immersion in rural northern Cambodia. My mission had been to stay with a family in a stilt house in a village of unpaved paths, and to explore the ruins that waited in the surrounding jungle gloom. Because of time and travel constraints, I was visiting during the rainy season, but that didn’t deter my explorations. Over the course of that week, I and my hiking shoes leapt over (and sometimes into) sudden streams, sloshed through ankle-deep puddles, glopped through ten-foot-long stretches of sole-sucking mud, crashed through clutching vines, stepped over furry millipedes, and stumbled on mossy picture-puzzle-pieces of massive rock carvings scattered on the jungle floor.
By the end of this adventure, my shoes looked like they’d been dipped in milk chocolate, and as I sat in my fan-cooled cottage in Siem Reap on the last night of my adventure, packing for the twenty-hour journey home, I briefly considered leaving my shoes behind. They had served me well, I reasoned, but they would not be serving me anymore.
Then I realized that doing so would be like leaving a quintessential part of my adventure—a part of me—behind. So I wrapped each shoe in three plastic bags and stuffed them into the corners of my carry-on case. When I got home and unpacked, I placed the shoes, still securely shrouded in plastic, in my bedroom closet, thinking that I would figure out what to do with them later, at a time that would make itself known.
For the past two hours I’ve been sitting in my study, entranced by the stories in this anthology, and now, pieces have clicked into place inside me, and I’ve realized that the time has come to unveil the chocolate-covered shoes. I retrieve them from the closet and then, back in my study, heft one plastic-wrapped package and gingerly extricate the bags inside. Particles of mud—mini-mementoes of Cambodian dirt and rainwater—fall onto my hardwood floor. I reach into the innermost bag and grab a heel, grainy and grimy, and as dirt sprays around me, pull the left shoe out. Soon the right shoe is resurrected as well.
I set the shoes like trophies on their plastic bags. They are spattered, splattered, scarred, and copiously caked in mud, and as I gaze at them, the jungle comes back to me—or rather, I go back to the jungle. I feel the heavy humidity, the sweat pouring like an open spigot down my face and back, hear the mosquitoes whining in my ear, slap at them ineffectually, take my camera in sweaty hands to photograph an intricate carving of a voluptuous Khmer dancer on a twofoot by three-foot by two-foot stone block, partly hidden among lush ferns.
I’m again parting branches and vines, laboriously liberating myself from persistent stickers, wiping the sweat from my eyes, stopping for a precious swig of water—the mosquitoes whining, dancing on my neck and hands—stepping over tumbled pieces of rock, slipping and sliding, grabbing at branches to stop my fall, clambering over a half-intact wall to see a bas relief story unfold before me, warriors and musicians and fish alive in stone. I slip again, and narrowly avoid planting my palm atop a millipede. The hairy, feety nightmares are everywhere and I recall what my guide said when I asked if they could harm me: “Oh yes, if you touch one, you will die.”
Through a screen of green I discern a wall, a doorway, a crumbling tower, a stony face—lips, nose, eyes—at the top of the tilting stone. I fumble with my camera as rain starts to fall, first a pitter-patter on the forest canopy and then an insistent downpour that penetrates the branches and leaves, and soaks me from the red bandana on my head to the invisible rubber soles of my shoes.
My shoes.
Suddenly I’m back in my study in a San Francisco suburb. The sun is shining, hummingbirds are flitting in the dappled branches beyond my window. The whine of a distant lawn mower dances, stingless, in the air.
And then the pieces snap together: hiking shoes—travel stories. Both take us places we never expected to go. The book you hold in your hands offers a spectacular collection of hiking shoes. Among them, Jill Robinson transports us to an illuminating rest stop standoff with a black mamba snake in Namibia, and Lisa Alpine takes us deep into the everyday wonders of an Amazon backwater. Tania Amochaev leads us on a rigorous journey to a remote Russian village in search of roots and relatives; through Jeff Greenwald, we discover the vividly ventricled heart of a natural landmark in Arizona. Lavinia Spalding guides us on a bittersweet birthday celebration through Cuba, Erin Byrne and Marcia DeSanctis excavate the layers of poignant pasts in Paris, Michael Shapiro searches for the soul of Dylan Thomas in Wales, and Amy Gigi Alexander maps the life-saving marvels that travel can sometimes confer.
Like my shoes, all the stories herein are battered, spattered, scarred. They’re immersed in the mud of life. And like my shoes, they’ve absorbed once inconceivable and now immeasurably enriching journeys.
So, I invite you to step into these stories, to embark on the magical, muddy adventures they hold. I can guarantee that you’ll go places you’ve never imagined—and unwrap lessons you’ll never forget.
* * *
Don George is the author of Lonely Planet’s Guide to Travel Writing and the forthcoming The Way of Wanderlust: The Best Travel Writing of Don George. Don has been a pioneering travel writer and editor for 40 years. He was the travel editor at the San Francisco Examiner and the San Francisco Chronicle, founder and editor of Salon’s “Wanderlust” travel site, and global travel editor for Lonely Planet. He is currently an editor at large and columnist for National Geographic Traveler and the editor of BBC Travel’s “Words and Wanderlust” section. Don is the cofounder and chairman of the renowned Book Passage Travel Writers and Photographers Conference. He has visited 90 countries and has published hundreds of articles in dozens of magazines, newspapers, and websites worldwide. He has also edited ten award-winning literary travel anthologies. He speaks and teaches regularly at conferences and on campuses around the world, and he is frequently interviewed on TV, radio, and online as a travel expert.
Immersed in the Mud of Life
By Don George
I’ve finally decided to unpack my hiking shoes. About a month ago I returned from a week-long immersion in rural northern Cambodia. My mission had been to stay with a family in a stilt house in a village of unpaved paths, and to explore the ruins that waited in the surrounding jungle gloom. Because of time and travel constraints, I was visiting during the rainy season, but that didn’t deter my explorations. Over the course of that week, I and my hiking shoes leapt over (and sometimes into) sudden streams, sloshed through ankle-deep puddles, glopped through ten-foot-long stretches of sole-sucking mud, crashed through clutching vines, stepped over furry millipedes, and stumbled on mossy picture-puzzle-pieces of massive rock carvings scattered on the jungle floor.
By the end of this adventure, my shoes looked like they’d been dipped in milk chocolate, and as I sat in my fan-cooled cottage in Siem Reap on the last night of my adventure, packing for the twenty-hour journey home, I briefly considered leaving my shoes behind. They had served me well, I reasoned, but they would not be serving me anymore.
Then I realized that doing so would be like leaving a quintessential part of my adventure—a part of me—behind. So I wrapped each shoe in three plastic bags and stuffed them into the corners of my carry-on case. When I got home and unpacked, I placed the shoes, still securely shrouded in plastic, in my bedroom closet, thinking that I would figure out what to do with them later, at a time that would make itself known.
For the past two hours I’ve been sitting in my study, entranced by the stories in this anthology, and now, pieces have clicked into place inside me, and I’ve realized that the time has come to unveil the chocolate-covered shoes. I retrieve them from the closet and then, back in my study, heft one plastic-wrapped package and gingerly extricate the bags inside. Particles of mud—mini-mementoes of Cambodian dirt and rainwater—fall onto my hardwood floor. I reach into the innermost bag and grab a heel, grainy and grimy, and as dirt sprays around me, pull the left shoe out. Soon the right shoe is resurrected as well.
I set the shoes like trophies on their plastic bags. They are spattered, splattered, scarred, and copiously caked in mud, and as I gaze at them, the jungle comes back to me—or rather, I go back to the jungle. I feel the heavy humidity, the sweat pouring like an open spigot down my face and back, hear the mosquitoes whining in my ear, slap at them ineffectually, take my camera in sweaty hands to photograph an intricate carving of a voluptuous Khmer dancer on a twofoot by three-foot by two-foot stone block, partly hidden among lush ferns.
I’m again parting branches and vines, laboriously liberating myself from persistent stickers, wiping the sweat from my eyes, stopping for a precious swig of water—the mosquitoes whining, dancing on my neck and hands—stepping over tumbled pieces of rock, slipping and sliding, grabbing at branches to stop my fall, clambering over a half-intact wall to see a bas relief story unfold before me, warriors and musicians and fish alive in stone. I slip again, and narrowly avoid planting my palm atop a millipede. The hairy, feety nightmares are everywhere and I recall what my guide said when I asked if they could harm me: “Oh yes, if you touch one, you will die.”
Through a screen of green I discern a wall, a doorway, a crumbling tower, a stony face—lips, nose, eyes—at the top of the tilting stone. I fumble with my camera as rain starts to fall, first a pitter-patter on the forest canopy and then an insistent downpour that penetrates the branches and leaves, and soaks me from the red bandana on my head to the invisible rubber soles of my shoes.
My shoes.
Suddenly I’m back in my study in a San Francisco suburb. The sun is shining, hummingbirds are flitting in the dappled branches beyond my window. The whine of a distant lawn mower dances, stingless, in the air.
And then the pieces snap together: hiking shoes—travel stories. Both take us places we never expected to go. The book you hold in your hands offers a spectacular collection of hiking shoes. Among them, Jill Robinson transports us to an illuminating rest stop standoff with a black mamba snake in Namibia, and Lisa Alpine takes us deep into the everyday wonders of an Amazon backwater. Tania Amochaev leads us on a rigorous journey to a remote Russian village in search of roots and relatives; through Jeff Greenwald, we discover the vividly ventricled heart of a natural landmark in Arizona. Lavinia Spalding guides us on a bittersweet birthday celebration through Cuba, Erin Byrne and Marcia DeSanctis excavate the layers of poignant pasts in Paris, Michael Shapiro searches for the soul of Dylan Thomas in Wales, and Amy Gigi Alexander maps the life-saving marvels that travel can sometimes confer.
Like my shoes, all the stories herein are battered, spattered, scarred. They’re immersed in the mud of life. And like my shoes, they’ve absorbed once inconceivable and now immeasurably enriching journeys.
So, I invite you to step into these stories, to embark on the magical, muddy adventures they hold. I can guarantee that you’ll go places you’ve never imagined—and unwrap lessons you’ll never forget.
* * *
Don George is the author of Lonely Planet’s Guide to Travel Writing and the forthcoming The Way of Wanderlust: The Best Travel Writing of Don George. Don has been a pioneering travel writer and editor for 40 years. He was the travel editor at the San Francisco Examiner and the San Francisco Chronicle, founder and editor of Salon’s “Wanderlust” travel site, and global travel editor for Lonely Planet. He is currently an editor at large and columnist for National Geographic Traveler and the editor of BBC Travel’s “Words and Wanderlust” section. Don is the cofounder and chairman of the renowned Book Passage Travel Writers and Photographers Conference. He has visited 90 countries and has published hundreds of articles in dozens of magazines, newspapers, and websites worldwide. He has also edited ten award-winning literary travel anthologies. He speaks and teaches regularly at conferences and on campuses around the world, and he is frequently interviewed on TV, radio, and online as a travel expert.