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In the nineteenth century, Jules Verne imagined a journey round the
world. At the start of the twentieth century, an American
millionaire, Charles J. Glidden, did it for real - though it took
many more than eighty days. Assisted by Charles Thomas, a Sussex
engineer, the millionaire took his Napier car twice around the
world, to places that had never seen a powered vehicle. The
journeys took them across thirty-nine countries on four continents.
In Switzerland they were arrested for driving on a forbidden road.
Later they fitted the car with railroad wheels and drove to
Vancouver on the tracks of the Canadian Pacific. During their
travels they met people of all kinds, from impoverished pilgrims to
maharajahs. In Fiji there was an encounter with the last cannibal;
in militarist Japan they experienced anti-Western attitudes. Andrew
Jepson tells the fascinating story of these ground-breaking
journeys with the aid of images taken from Charles Thomas' own
photograph albums. This is a must-read for all motoring
enthusiasts.
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