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Books > Sport & Leisure > Travel & holiday > Travel writing
I can move only with the aid of barrels of anti-inflammatory gel,
sticking plasters and real ale anaesthetic. Martin and I descend
from hours of walking to the small town of Middleton-in-Teesdale. I
walk, stiff legged, into the campsite office and a plump,
middle-aged woman looks up from her desk and can see the old timer
is in trouble. "Oh, what a shame you weren't here last week," she
says, pity radiating from behind her horn-rimmed specs. "You've
missed him." I look at her, puzzled. "Elvis!" she explains. "You
missed Elvis." Oh God, now I'm hallucinating... In Bothy Tales, the
follow-up to The Last Hillwalker from bestselling mountain writer
John D. Burns, travel with the author to secret places hidden
amongst the British hills and share his passion for the wonderful
wilderness of our uplands. From remote glens deep in the Scottish
Highlands, Burns brings a new volume of tales - some dramatic, some
moving, some hilarious - from the isolated mountain shelters called
bothies. Meet the vivid cast of characters who play their games
there, from climbers with more confidence than sense to a young man
who doesn't have the slightest idea what he's letting himself in
for...
Now a limited Netflix series starring Zoe Saldana! This Reese
Witherspoon Book Club Pick and New York Times bestseller is "a
captivating story of love lost and found" (Kirkus Reviews) set in
the lush Sicilian countryside, where one woman discovers the
healing powers of food, family, and unexpected grace in her darkest
hours. It was love at first sight when actress Tembi met
professional chef, Saro, on a street in Florence. There was just
one problem: Saro's traditional Sicilian family did not approve of
his marrying a black American woman. However, the couple,
heartbroken but undeterred, forged on. They built a happy life in
Los Angeles, with fulfilling careers, deep friendships, and the
love of their lives: a baby girl they adopted at birth. Eventually,
they reconciled with Saro's family just as he faced a formidable
cancer that would consume all their dreams. From Scratch chronicles
three summers Tembi spends in Sicily with her daughter, Zoela, as
she begins to piece together a life without her husband in his tiny
hometown hamlet of farmers. Where once Tembi was estranged from
Saro's family, now she finds solace and nourishment-literally and
spiritually-at her mother-in-law's table. In the Sicilian
countryside, she discovers the healing gifts of simple fresh food,
the embrace of a close knit community, and timeless traditions and
wisdom that light a path forward. All along the way she reflects on
her and Saro's romance-an incredible love story that leaps off the
pages. In Sicily, it is said that every story begins with a
marriage or a death-in Tembi Locke's case, it is both. "Locke's raw
and heartfelt memoir will uplift readers suffering from the loss of
their own loved ones" (Publishers Weekly), but her story is also
about love, finding a home, and chasing flavor as an act of
remembrance. From Scratch is for anyone who has dared to reach for
big love, fought for what mattered most, and those who needed a
powerful reminder that life is...delicious.
For years Patricia Schultz has been telling us where to go-her
1,000 Places to See Before You Die (R) books and calendars have
sold millions of copies to eager travelers looking to explore new
destinations and round out bucket lists. Now, in a beautifully
illustrated gift book that's filled with inspiration perfectly
timed to meet the pent-up demand for travel, Patricia Schultz tells
us why to go. Personal stories and anecdotes, quotes about travel,
affirmations, ideas, and travel hacks-and stunning photographs
throughout-Why We Travel comes at its subject from many directions,
but all of them point to the same goal: Travel is one of the most
richly rewarding experiences we can have. It is, as Pico Iyer says,
the place where we stay up late, follow impulse and find ourselves
as wide open as when we are in love. It is something we must do
ourselves, since No one can explore the world for you. It forces us
to go with the flow: When plan B doesn't work, move on in the
alphabet. And it gives us so many memories. Patricia shares some of
her most rewarding, like going on safari in Zambia and finding her
most lasting memory in a classroom of five-year-olds.
This is the first travel book that tested the idea that a
five-year-old daughter makes for a useful international travelling
companion. Together Dervla Murphy and her daughter Rachel with
little money, no taste for luxury and few concrete plans meander
their way slowly south from Bombay to the southernmost point of
India, Cape Comorin. Interested in everything they see, but only
truly enchanted by people, they stay in fisherman's huts and
no-star hotels, travelling in packed-out buses, on foot and by
local boats. Instead of pressing ever onwards, like so many
travellers, they double back to the place they liked most, the hill
province of Coorg and settle down to live there for two months.
Anchored by her daughter's delight in the company of her Indian
neighbours, Dervla Murphy creates an extraordinarily affectionate
portrait of these cardamon-scented, spiritually and agriculturally
self- sufficient Highlands. If travel is underwritten by an
unwitting search for a lost paradise, this is a quest that was
achieved - made possible with the right sort of travelling
companion.
In 1932 Evelyn Waugh left the salons of Mayfair for the savannah
and rainforest of what was then British Guiana. The result: classic
travel writing.
With their thirtieth birthdays looming, Jen, Holly, and Amanda
are feeling the pressure to hit certain milestones--score the big
promotion, find a soul mate, have 2.2 kids. Instead, they make a
pact to quit their jobs, leave behind everything familiar, and
embark on a yearlong round-the-world search for inspiration and
direction.
Traveling 60,000 miles across four continents, Jen, Holly, and
Amanda push themselves far outside their comfort zones to embrace
every adventure. Ultimately, theirs is a story of true
friendship--a bond forged by sharing beds and backpacks, enduring
exotic illnesses, trekking across mountains, and standing by one
another through heartaches, whirlwind romances, and everything in
the world in between.
Between these covers, the millennia of mercantile and cultural
exchange along the Silk Route are celebrated by travellers and
writers from Marco Polo to Sven Hedin, from William of Rubrick to
Ella Maillart. Kathleen Hopkirk has spent a lifetime researching
this vital heartland, traversed by five, inhospitable deserts but
united by ancient chains of trading oases: from the Buddhist Empire
of Kushan, to the scholarly Islamic centre at Bukhara, from the
military conquerors massing in both directions to the saintly
missionaries and monks who moved between its centres of learning.
This mysterious homeland of the Tartars, Turks, Mongols, Uzbeks,
Uighurs, Tajiks, Scythians and Sarmatians, gave the world
terrifying conquerors of the stature of Gengiz Khan and Tamberlane.
Later it became the focus of the Great Game, a rivalry for
influence in the area between the empires of Russia and Britain
played out by spies, ambassadors, agents and travel writers for 150
years, itself a continuation of the old cultural rivalry between
Persia and China for the soul of this vast region.
The Sea of Zanj has been a place of myth and mystery since time immemorial, and its islands have captured countless imaginations. Mauritius, Réunion and Rodrigues, the Seychelles and Madagascar – Thomas Victor Bulpin recounts their stories and histories; stories of strange animals and exotic places, of pirates and runaway slaves, of forgotten kingdoms and deadly welcomes.
Much has changed in the islands since Islands in a forgotten sea first appeared in the 1950s, and the author has left an invaluable account of an enchanting and often brutal world far removed from the air-conditioned resorts and package tours so familiar to tourists today.
For decades now, Pico Iyer has been based for much of the year in
Nara, Japan, where he and his Japanese wife, Hiroko, share a
two-room apartment. But when his father-in-law dies suddenly,
calling him back to Japan earlier than expected, Iyer begins to
grapple with the question we all have to live with: how to hold on
to the things we love, even though we know that we and they are
dying. In a country whose calendar is marked with occasions
honouring the dead, this question has a special urgency and
currency. Iyer leads us through the autumn following his
father-in-law's death, introducing us to the people who populate
his days: his ailing mother-in-law, who often forgets that her
husband has died; his absent brother-in-law, who severed ties with
his family years ago but to whom Hiroko still writes letters; and
the men and women in his ping-pong club, who, many years his
senior, traverse their autumn years in different ways. And as the
maple leaves begin to redden and the heat begins to soften, Iyer
offers us a singular view of Japan, in the season that reminds us
to take nothing for granted.
2022 Silver Midwest Book Award Winner At the sound of the bell on
the last day of kindergarten, B.J. Hollars and his six-year-old
son, Henry, hop in the car to strike out on a 2,500-mile road trip
retracing the Oregon Trail. Their mission: to rediscover America,
and Americans, along the way. Throughout their two-week adventure,
they endure the usual setbacks (car trouble, inclement weather, and
father-son fatigue), but their most compelling drama involves
people, privilege, and their attempt to find common ground in an
all-too-fractured country. Writing in the footsteps of John
Steinbeck's Travels with Charley, Hollars picks up the trail with
his son more than half a century later. Together they sidle up to a
stool at every truck stop, camp by every creek, and roam the West.
They encounter not only the beauty and heartbreak of America, but
also the beauty and heartbreak of a father and son eager to make
the most of their time together. From Chimney Rock to Independence
Rock to the rocky coast of Oregon, they learn and relearn the
devastating truth of America's exploitative past, as well as their
role within it. Go West, Young Man recounts the author's effort to
teach his son the difficult realities of our nation's founding
while also reaffirming his faith in America today.
Smelling the Breezes is an inspiring adventure, that throws down a
gauntlet about what can be achieved in a family holiday. Rather
than give a leaving party, Ralph and Molly Izzard had their own
plans about how to say goodbye to their home in the Middle East.
They would walk the three-hundred mile spine of the Lebanese
mountains, camping where ever they stopped with their four
children, two donkeys and Elias (their gardener-nursemaid-friend)
as their sole travelling companions.
In 1960 the government of Trinidad invited V. S. Naipaul to revisit
his native country and record his impressions. In this classic of
modern travel writing he has created a deft and remarkably
prescient portrait of Trinidad and four adjacent Caribbean
societies-countries haunted by the legacies of slavery and
colonialism and so thoroughly defined by the norms of Empire that
they can scarcely believe that the Empire is ending.
In The Middle Passage, Naipaul watches a Trinidadian movie audience
greeting Humphrey Bogart's appearance with cries of "That is man "
He ventures into a Trinidad slum so insalubrious that the locals
call it the Gaza Strip. He follows a racially charged election
campaign in British Guiana (now Guyana) and marvels at the Gallic
pretension of Martinique society, which maintains the fiction that
its roads are extensions of France's "routes nationales." And
throughout he relates the ghastly episodes of the region's colonial
past and shows how they continue to inform its language, politics,
and values. The result is a work of novelistic vividness and
dazzling perspicacity that displays Naipaul at the peak of his
powers.
Island of Lightning is the latest book of travel essays by the
prizewinning Robert Minhinnick, poet, novelist, translator,
cultural commentator and environmentalist. In it he travels from
his home in south Wales to Argentina, China, Finland, Iraq, Tuscany
and Piemonte, Malta, New York, Zagreb, Lithuania and the lightning
island of Malta. In conventional travel essays and leaps of
imaginative narrative his subjects include the annual Elvis
convention in Porthcawl, Neolithic sculptures, the cruelties of
late twentieth century communism and its aftermath, rugby union,
the Argentinian writer Alfonsina Storni, poets playing football,
the body of a saint and the definition of cool. His themes are big
ones: the relationship of man and landscape, man and time, man and
nature, immigration and war, in one sense ultimately humankind
itself. Minhinnick explores with the eye of a poet and the gift of
a telling image or metaphor. His walk from Cardiff to the Rhondda
valleys is almost geological as he passes through the social and
cultural strata of the area's history. His astonishment at the
sheer number of people - the scale on which society works - in
China, results in an inventive grappling with the hugeness of the
world (and its growing problems). At the other end of the spectrum
his re-imagining of the life of Alfonsina Storni, her love for
Borges and her suicide is a delicate commentary on the personal and
the solitary. Readers will be entertained, informed and provoked by
this series of essays in which Minhinnick takes his subjects as
though holding them in his hand, turning them for new perspectives
and understanding.
A facsimile edition of Bradshaw's Canals and Navigable Rivers of
England and Wales. In the Victorian era, the name Bradshaw became
synonymous with reliable information on travelling the nation's
blossoming network of railways. Published in 1904, Canals and
Navigable Rivers was the first guide to planning journeys on the
inland waterways of England and Wales. Noting bridges, locks,
distances and commercial use, it explores the routes, operation and
history of the network, and gives commentary on the areas through
which it passed. Compiled at a time when the railways had largely
supplanted the waterways, it paints a fascinating portrait of the
Edwardian canal system as it began to fall into gentle decay. This
facsimile edition of the original book now offers a different
perspective for canal boaters and walkers, and gives invaluable
information about waterways now lost.
Alexander Burnes travelled up the Indus to Lahore and to the
Khanates of Afghanistan and Central Asia in the 1830s, spying on
behalf of the British Government in what was to become known as the
'Great Game'. His account of these travels was a bestseller in its
day and this brand new edition brings the heady sense of
excitement, risk and zeal bursting from the pages.
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