Travel Blog: Life of a Travel Writer

A Guidebook Writer’s Short History of Lonely Planet

Former Lonely Planet author Wayne Bernhardson blogs about the controversy surrounding Thomas Kohnstamm’s Do Travel Writers Go to Hell? and offers his own short history of the guidebook company. “Even assuming he wrote truthfully of everything he did ... Kohnstamm’s self-indulgent analysis of the guidebook industry was flagrantly superficial,” he writes. “Moreover, almost everyone who responded with indignation to his hype got it mostly or nearly all wrong.” We gave Kohnstamm his say here.

Related on World Hum:
* Thomas Kohnstamm’s Lonely Planet: The Firestorm Around ‘Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?’
* ‘Worst Guidebook Writer Ever?’
* Lonely Planet at 30


Tony Horwitz Blogs From the Road

The author of “A Voyage Long and Strange,” just interviewed on World Hum, is blogging while on his U.S. book tour.


Time Magazine’s 100 List Includes Elizabeth Gilbert, Cuban Blogger


Travel Writing and Tall Tales: An Historical Perspective

Nilanjana S Roy reminds us that the story of Thomas Kohnstamm and the controversy he’s stirred up are nothing new. She writes, “The issues that Kohnstamm raises—poor pay, insufficient time, too much territory to cover—have plagued the travel writing industry ever since the Egyptians, Arabs and Chinese sent off emissaries to see what the rest of the world was like.”

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‘Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?’ is ‘Selling Well’

That little nugget is buried near the end of yet another story—this one by Michael Shapiro in the Washington Post—about Thomas Kohnstamm and the controversy surrounding his book “Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?” What “selling well” means in concrete terms, though, isn’t clear. Shapiro writes, “Kohnstamm’s publicist wouldn’t disclose sales figures but says the book has already been reprinted.” Whether the controversy stimulated or possibly depressed sales, then, remains an open question.

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Will Mr. Newsham Go to Washington?

Perhaps. Brad Newsham, author of the travel memoir Take Me With You, announced via email that he’s collecting signatures to become a write-in candidate to represent California’s 9th District, now represented by Democrat (and National Passport Month supporter) Barbara Lee. Newsham explained that he disagrees with her on only one issue, “but it’s a fundamental issue for me, and perhaps for you: the impeachment of Bush and Cheney. For me, this issue is so important that it eclipses all others.” Newsham, pictured here running naked on a Hawaiian beach, has been rallying for the pair’s impeachment.


‘Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?’ Debuts, Second Wave of Reaction Ensues

Thomas Kohnstamm’s now infamous book hit booksellers this week, spurring another batch of reviews, considerations and rants around the web. Among them:

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Paul Theroux on Why He Likes Obama

I just stumbled across this recent interview the travel writer and novelist gave in Bangkok on YouTube:

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Pico Iyer on ‘The Quiet American’: It’s ‘a Private Bible’

The seemingly omnipresent Pico Iyer popped up on NPR yesterday with a You Must Read This essay on “The Quiet American.” Why does he always pack the Graham Greene novel in his carry-on? “The novel asks every one of us what we want from a foreign place, and what we are planning to do with it,” he says. “It points out that innocence and idealism can claim as many lives as the opposite, fearful cynicism. And it reminds me that the world is much larger than our ideas of it, and how the Vietnamese woman at the book’s center, Phuong, will always remain outside a foreigner’s grasp. It even brings all the pieces of my own background—Asian, English, American—into the same puzzle.” Iyer recently spoke with World Hum about Tibet and the Dalai Lama.


Paul Theroux Skewers V.S. Naipaul (Again)

One of my favorite Paul Theroux books is Sir Vidia’s Shadow, his memoir of his ill-fated friendship with V.S. Naipaul. In it, Theroux paints an ugly picture of the famed writer, detailing countless character flaws. Now, a new authorized biography of Naipaul is coming out, The World Is What It Is, by Patrick French. That book, writes Theroux in the London Times, “amply demonstrates everything I said and more. It is not a pretty story; it will probably destroy Naipaul’s reputation for ever.” Wow. Talk about twisting the knife. Theroux’s new travel book, Ghost Train to the Eastern Star, is due out in September.

 


Are Cell Phones Killing the Tradition of Cabbies as Travel Guides and Cracker-Barrel Philosophers?

Photo by tinou bao, via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Sadly, I think so. During my recent travels to New Orleans, Austin and Los Angeles, I took eight cab rides. During two of them I barely said a word to the driver. Not because I didn’t want to, but because the cabbie was on his cell phone, yapping with someone else. I was annoyed by the chatter, but also deflated.

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Postcards: Making a Comeback

Photo by k.tommy now via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Not so long ago I wrote about the last days of the postcard—now it seems my requiem for a beloved travel souvenir may have been premature. This story in the Globe and Mail suggests that postcards are actually making a comeback, noting that sales, in the UK and Canada at least, have only increased since 2003.

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Thomas Kohnstamm, Lonely Planet and the Question of Eternal Damnation

Some writers have declared that former Lonely Planet author Thomas Kohnstamm just might be going to hell. Others charge that he’s a fraud. My take: The author of the new book Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?, about his not-so-ideal experience in the travel-writing business, has said some stupid things (which he regrets). His publisher is playing up his book’s salacious details. And he may not win a Nobel Peace Prize or lifetime achievement award. But he’ll escape eternal damnation—at least on travel-writing grounds. We just posted an interview with him covering the high points of the controversy (with links to a number of stories about it). And we got to the sex stuff, too.


Peter Hessler on C-Span’s ‘Washington Journal’

The prominent travel writer—not an annoying fake one—appears on C-Span’s “Washington Journal” program this morning to discuss China issues. 

Related on World Hum:
* Peter Hessler Nominated For National Magazine Award


Why the New York Times Killed its Weekly Travel Essay

I lamented the loss of the New York Times’ weekly travel essay in December 2004, and, as with Salon’s late Wanderlust section, I’ve felt a little hole in my travel-essay-loving heart ever since it vanished. I’m not alone. New York Times travel editor, Stuart Emmrich, is answering questions from readers this week, and he fielded one from R. Davidson, who asks, “Your articles on the inside last page were often the most interesting. Why have you dropped them in favor of a huge photo and boring explanation of why someone travels to a particular place?”

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