Travel Blog: Literary Travel

New Essays at Recce

Among the highlights: Don George reflects on a trip to Italy and the loss of his father—a touching piece; Catherine Watson describes a journey to Nepal with a friend who was “coming back from the brink of death”; and Simon Winchester discusses his fascination with China.


Travel Lit Criticism: When Professors Stop Making Sense

In the Wall Street Journal, genetics professor Steve Jones praises Charles Darwin’s The Voyage of the Beagle, arguing that, in contrast to Darwin’s other books, the travel memoir “sings.” Fine, but the professor loses me with this observation: “The joy of the journey was that it had a point. Bruce Chatwin and Paul Theroux have each written great travel books about South America—but why, in the end, did they bother? The smell of the agent, the contract and the advance hangs around their pages, but for Darwin (who was in no need of money) every paragraph exudes instead the heady scent of discovery.”

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New Travel Novel: ‘Dear American Airlines’

Author: Jonathan Miles

Released: April 29, 2008

Travel genre: Fiction—the literature of “Airworld”

Territory covered: Chicago’s O’Hare Airport, the life of protagonist Bennie Ford

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Visiting Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul

Nobel Prize-winning writer Orhan Pamuk’s Istanbul: Memories and the City is “the perfect literary companion” for a visit to Istanbul, Ben Quinn observes in the Guardian. The memoir evokes 1950s and ‘60s Istanbul. Writes Quinn: “[F]or those seeking to avoid the tourism trail—revolving around the “old” city and the undoubted beauties of the Hagia Sophia and the Blue Mosque—Pamuk reserves a special fondness for Istanbul’s lesser known quarters.”

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Fictional Travelers and the ‘Greatest Books’

The Globe and Mail is hard at work on a list of the 50 Greatest Books—each week through 2008 they’re adding another entry—and some of our favorite fictional travelers are representin’. It’s only week 17, and already The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Gulliver’s Travels and Don Quixote have made the cut. I won’t hold my breath waiting for a nonfiction travel narrative to make the list, but stay tuned to see if Sal Paradise or Odysseus show up later in the year.

Related on World Hum:
* 10 Greatest Fictional Travelers
* World Hum’s Top 30 Travel Books


Granta Unveils New Website

It looks sharp. In an online video, editor Jason Crowley vows to bring the literary journal “into the 21st century” and to reinvest in “more long-form narrative reportage.”  Given that Granta has published some of the world’s best travel writers over the years—most notably under Bill Buford’s editorship—that’s great news.

Related on World Hum:
* Travel Writing, Heartbreak and Granta’s 100th Issue


World Hum’s Most Read: April 19-25

Our five most popular features and blog posts this week:

1) Thomas Kohnstamm’s Lonely Planet: The Firestorm Around ‘Do Travel Writers Go to Hell?’
2) ‘The Worst Guidebook Writer Ever’?
3) How to: Wear a Sari in India (pictured)
4) How to: Use a Squat Toilet
5) Out of the Wild? Alaskan Town Considers Removing McCandless Bus

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Talking Surf Writing in Los Angeles

Nice to see surf writing getting some well-deserved attention. The annual Los Angeles Times Festival of Books takes place this weekend on the campus of UCLA, and among the many scheduled panels is one entitled “Surf Culture: Shooting the Tube.” Panelists include author and former Surfer magazine editor Steve Hawk and novelist Kem Nunn. Today’s Los Angeles Times has a story that (oddly) speculates on what they might discuss. Also of interest at the festival: “Nonfiction: Blurring Boundaries,” a panel featuring, among others, travel writers and festival regulars Pico Iyer and Tony Cohan. A complete schedule can be found here.

Related on World Hum:
* The Enduring Appeal of ‘The Endless Summer’

Photo by colmsurf via Flickr, (Creative Commons)


‘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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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.


The Poetry of Walking

“Wandering, reading, writing—these three activities are for me intimately linked,” writes Edward Hirsch in an essay in Sunday’s Washington Post.


Bhagavad Gita, Quran Join Gideon Bible on Hotel’s ‘Spiritual Menu’

That’s not all that’s on the spiritual menu at Nashville’s Hotel Preston. It also offers versions of the Bible, the Torah, the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism, the Book of Mormon and other spiritual texts in an effort to “make everyone feel at home when they’re away from home,” writes one of the hotel’s bloggers. “Yes, even you Scientologists out there!” I’m writing this post from a Hilton in Los Angeles, and this story is making me feel spiritually underfed.

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Out Today: Pico Iyer’s ‘The Open Road’

The timing is remarkable. After Pico Iyer spent five years working on his new book about Tibet’s spiritual leader, The Open Road: The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama hits bookstores today—at a moment when Tibet is making headlines around the world. If nothing else, it assures Iyer’s work will find an audience beyond armchair travelers and Tibet admirers. We’ve just posted an interview with Iyer in which he explains why travel is at the heart of the book. Elsewhere on the Web, reviews and related Dalai Lama profiles are beginning to trickle in.

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Paul Theroux: ‘The Travel Book Was a Bore’

We recently noted that Paul Theroux’s next book, Ghost Train to the Eastern Star, due out in September, retraces the journey he chronicled in 1975’s The Great Railway Bazaar. Perhaps that’s why he’s now reflecting on his motivations behind the original journey, and his feelings about travel writing at the time. Whatever the reason, fans of “The Great Railway Bazaar” should enjoy this essay in the Guardian.

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Next Jan Morris Book to Come ‘From the Grave’

We won’t get to see Jan Morris’ last book until she passes away. It will be called “Allegorizings,” and it’s already finished—except for one chapter. The legendary 82-year-old writer told Publishers Weekly that the book revisits her “lifetime’s preoccupations—place and animals and all the things that have interested me. ... But, of course, I’m also looking back at them from a peculiar vantage point. There is a theme, which I suppose may remind the audience that even the most superficial writers can have a thread of more serious philosophical thoughts going through your mind.”

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