Travel Blog

State Department Travel Advisories Now Available on Twitter

You go, State Department, with your shiny new Twitter account. Very handy. So what does a State Department “tweet” look like? “This Travel Warning is being issued ... to the unstable social and security situation in Bolivia.” Poetry. For those keeping score, World Hum is also representing. (Via L.A. Times)


Long Descent Be Damned: Airports Still Romantic

When it comes to killing time in airworld, writer Ethan Gilsdorf sees a glass half-full. “It’s the perpetual option of suddenly being somewhere distant and different from my home that makes airports seductive,” he writes in an essay for the New York Times. “I could rush up to any ticket counter and buy a last-minute fare to Oslo or Detroit. I could be like the hero of a movie, following my whim to be with the woman my destiny has foretold.”

Read More »


After Ike: Flights to Houston to Resume Today

Southwest and JetBlue are among the airlines that will offer limited service to Houston Hobby Airport today, after Hurricane Ike swept through the area, leaving dozens dead and a path of destruction. Needless to say, travel to Houston and coastal Texas won’t return to anything resembling normal for some time.


Happy Birthday, Marco Polo

Polo was born on this day in 1254. As Garrison Keillor points out in today’s “Writer’s Almanac,” Polo’s book about his travels, creatively titled “The Travels of Marco Polo” in English, was “a huge sensation” when it came out in 1298. Keillor notes that Polo wrote the book while bored in prison, dictating it to a fellow writer held in his cell.


Paul Theroux on Henry David Thoreau, Sarah Palin and Moose Hunting

Photo of Alaska moose by richardrichard via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

The train-riding travel writer isn’t impressed by Sarah Palin’s moose-hunting experience. “All this talk about moose hunting! It is as though, because of the animal’s enormous size and imposing antlers, bringing one down is a heroic feat of marksmanship,” Theroux writes in an op-ed in Sunday’s Los Angeles Times. “Nothing could be further from the truth. As Henry David Thoreau wrote in ‘The Maine Woods,’ killing these big, gentle, myopic creatures is more ‘like going out by night to some woodside pasture and shooting your neighbor’s horses.’”

 


R.I.P. David Foster Wallace*

Photo by Steve Rhodes via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

Horrible news is emerging that the widely acclaimed writer committed suicide in his Claremont, California, home Friday night. Wallace is perhaps best known for the novel “Infinite Jest,” but travel lit fans also know him for his typically footnote-laden 1996 Harper’s article, “Shipping Out: On the (Nearly Lethal) Comforts of a Luxury Cruise”—one of modern travel writing’s sharpest and funniest stories. (We were just singing the story’s praises a few months ago, in fact.) His 1997 appearance on “Charlie Rose” is well worth a look. Wallace was 46.

Read More »


World Hum’s Most Read: Sept. 6-12

Our five most popular features and blog posts for the week:

1) How Does Sarah Palin Rank in Foreign Travel Experience?
2) Seven Reasons to Have a Foreign Fling (pictured)
3) From Mecca to the Vatican to the Kumbh Mela: Religious Tourism on the Rise
4) Visit Myanmar—That’s an Order
5) Paul Theroux: Invisible Man on a Ghost Train


What We Loved This Week: Chorizo Tacos, ‘Stuff White People Like’ and ‘Passenger Side’

World Hum contributors share a favorite travel-related experience from the past seven days.

Stephen Brookes
I’ve been watching the protests going on in Thailand with interest, partly because an old boss of mine—Sondhi Limthongkul, who hired me to write for his newspaper Asia Times—is leading the demonstrations. And things are getting wild: not only was the prime minister forced to resign this week (over hosting a TV cooking show!), but dozens of protesters have been killed or injured, tourists were stranded when demonstrations closed airports, and a state of emergency was decreed Sept. 2. Many countries (including the U.S.) have issued stern travel advisories.

Read More »

Tags:

Go Easy on Texas, Ike

The forecasts are horrific. Sophia Dembling’s essay, Traveling While Texan, should give you more than enough reasons to lay off the place.


Harrison Ford: When Good Celebrity Travel Stories Go Bad

You can almost hear the swearing emanating from Outside magazine’s New Mexico offices when, after scoring an interview with action hero Harrison Ford about his travels, editors finally read the transcript. Ford makes almost no sense.

Read More »


U.K. Tour Operator’s Collapse Strands Thousands

Nearly 90,000 British travelers have been stranded across the globe after the UK’s third largest tour operator collapsed and grounded all its planes. XL Leisure Group blamed “high fuel prices and a sagging economy” for its demise, the AP reports, noting that the Civil Aviation Authority will be making arrangements to bring affected travelers home.

Photo by sun dazed via Flickr (Creative Commons).


Singing the Praises of Belleville, Edith Piaf’s Paris

Many travelers know Belleville as the Paris neighborhood where they can find Pere Lachaise cemetery. I recall riding the metro out there more than a decade ago, like every other college kid with a Let’s Go, to check out the tombstones of Jim Morrison and Gertrude Stein. But what I didn’t appreciate at the time was that Belleville was also once the home of singer Edith Piaf.

Read More »


Photos: ‘80s Tourists in Their Native Habitat

Photo by Michael Yessis

Back in the Reagan Era, Lucian Perkins went to the most touristy place in Washington, D.C.—The National Mall—and photographed tourists. The former Washington Post photojournalist’s images are currently on display at D.C.‘s Carroll Square Gallery, and also in a fleshy and compelling online slideshow, Visitors From Another Planet.

 


Remembering 9/11, Seven Years Later

We can’t let the day pass without noting the 7th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. In Washington, D.C., President Bush dedicated the Pentagon Memorial, which the Washington Post called “the nation’s first major Sept. 11 remembrance site.” Esquire looks at the slow-moving Freedom Towers project at Ground Zero.

Read More »

Tags: 9.11.01

Night at Hearst Castle to be Auctioned on eBay


Photo by mbtrama, via Flickr (Creative Commons)

I’m sure the bids will be astronomical, as they should be. Hearst Castle‘s beds haven’t seen overnight visitors in 50 years, and the winner of the auction—and his or her companion—will have the run of Julia Morgan‘s hilltop masterpiece in San Simeon, California. Among the things the top bidder will be able to do: Screen a movie in William Randolph Hearst’s private theater. Of course, only one movie should top everyone’s must-watch list: Citizen Kane.

Read More »