Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

TRAVEL BLOG
SPEAKER'S CORNER
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Vagrant Ruminations of a Compulsive Traveler

Where does the urge to hunt for that “fleeting fix of elsewhere” come from? Peter Wortsman recalls a life of travel inspiration. 

Q&A
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Rolf Potts: Revelations from a Postmodern Travel Writer

His new book “Marco Polo Didn’t Go There” includes his best stories from the past 10 years. Michael Yessis asks him how travel writing has changed in the last decade—and what he sees for the future.

AUDIO SLIDESHOW
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Notes From an Unofficial Tourist Greeter

Summer is over, and so is Julia Ross‘ season as an ambassador to travelers in Washington, D.C.’s Woodley Park neighborhood. She’s happy to be off duty.


THE LIST
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10 Great Travel Race Movies

Slow travel is well and good. But there’s something irresistible about a great travel race movie. World Hum Travel Movie Clubbers Eva Holland and Eli Ellison share their favorite vicarious thrill rides.

HOW TO
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Eat Ceviche in Lima

Grab a Cusqueña and get comfortable. As Nicholas Gill explains, a trip to a Peruvian cevichería can be an all-day immersion in good conversation and raw seafood.

ASK ROLF
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How Should I Spend My Time in Spain?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

BOOKS
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Unsentimental Journeys: Wrestling With Paul Theroux

Bronwen Dickey considers “Ghost Train to the Eastern Star: 28,000 Miles in Search of the Great Railway Bazaar”

TRAVEL BLOG
7.13.06

Granta 94: “On the Road Again. Where Travel Writing Went Next.”

imageThe latest issue of Granta, On the Road Again, focuses on travel, and on Sunday, the Guardian published a thoughtful piece about the issue and Granta’s proud travel-writing history. Writer Robert McCrum notes that former Granta editor Bill Buford “charmed and bamboozled” contributors such as Paul Theroux, Redmond O’Hanlon and Bruce Chatwin for stories. “Buford celebrated travel writing as a cocktail of reportage, storytelling and ‘a narrative eloquence’ that placed it ‘somewhere between fiction and fact,’” McCrum writes. “Now, in more sober times, new editor Ian Jack, who locates the genre somewhere more trustworthy and responsible, has come up with an absorbing edition subtitled ‘Where Travel Writing Went Next.’”

McCrum continues:

In the age of easyJet and ba.com, travel is no longer a carefree episode of private truancy conducted by canoe or donkey. From its opening pages, this volume has CO2 and global warming on its mind. ‘All we know,’ writes Jack, ‘is that climate change is slowly eating away our belief in permanence.’ This mood is sustained in James Hamilton-Paterson’s piece ‘The End of Travel’, an elegy for the supplanting of travel by tourism, combined with a marvellously grumpy moan about cruise ships.

Granta’s Web site features the issue’s table of contents. For the record, Theroux, O’Hanlon and the late Chatwin are not among the contributors.

Posted by Jim Benning • 7.13.06
Categories: WeblogLiterary TravelThe Critics

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