TRAVEL BLOGWorld Hum’s Most Read: Aug. 2-8What We Loved This Week: Paul Theroux, the Bombay Club and Summer in ChicagoWorld’s Longest Yard Sale: 654 Miles of Bargains From Ohio to AlabamaInside the ‘Cuisines of the Axis of Evil’
Q&A
J. Maarten Troost: Enduring Pollution and Reptile-Laden Lunches in China For Our BenefitDavid Farley chats with the author of “Lost on Planet China” about the Olympic Games, Tibet and eating not-so-well in the Middle Kingdom BOOKS‘The Monster of Florence’: Murder and the Pursuit of TruthDouglas Preston’s latest book, the true story of a serial killer in Italy, shows that the world is far from exhausted for those who want to travel deep. Frank Bures tells why. AUDIO SLIDESHOWMy Travels, My FeetAfter taking one too many headless torso shots of herself, solo traveler Sophia Dembling started snapping photos of her feet around the world, from the Grand Canyon to Red Square SPEAKER'S CORNER
Affairs to Remember—On-Screen and OffFrom “Roman Holiday” to “Before Sunrise,” Hollywood has understood the appeal of the overseas fling. Eva Holland explains the staying power of the big screen Euro-romance. THE LIST
Seven Reasons to Have a Foreign FlingSure, having an overseas romance is fun. But Terry Ward points out seven other benefits to cross-border love, mon petit chou. ASK ROLFAs a Woman, Can I Really Travel Without Much Fear for my Safety?Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel HOW TO
Break Bread and Brie in FranceGreat cheese abounds in the land of Gaul, but dig in and you risk committing any number of faux pas. Terry Ward explains how to partake of the nation’s famed fromage with savoir faire. |
TRAVEL BLOG5.23.06
No. 9: “The Innocents Abroad” by Mark Twain
The passage, like the rest of “The Innocents Abroad,” is classic Twain: witty, insightful, original. Twain may not have attempted to write with profundity and gravity, but in the end, through the sheer force of his observations of people and life on the Continent and the Holy Land, that’s just what he delivered.
Outtake from The Innocents Abroad
For more about Mark Twain and “Innocents Abroad,” check out the University of Virginia’s extensive Web site on the book, including excerpts of Twain’s original letters and early reviews. -- Michael Yessis is the co-editor of World Hum. Categories: Weblog • Europe • Icons: Mark Twain • Top 30 Travel Books
COMMENTSYou can still find Mark Twain’s signature scrawled in a windowpane at the Shakespeare birthplace in Stratford on Avon from his Europe travels and Twain was one of the doubters of the Shakespeare authorship By Michael on 2.26.07 at 03:12 PM
I am just finishing this book now and about to start on A Tramp Abroad. This book has been the most enlightening, well written, thought out, and ultimately flat out amazing travel narrative I have ever read. I can not understand why more people have not read this book and why it is not being heralded by travelers everywhere. Up until two months ago I didn’t even know Twain wrote travel narratives, now the guy is my ultimate role model! By Jake on 9.25.07 at 02:30 AM
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