Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

TRAVEL BLOG
HOW TO
image

Love Herring in Sweden

From artery-clogging casseroles to a fermented concoction that smells alarmingly like vinegary flatulence, Lola Akinmade digs in to a smörgåsbord of herring and explains how to best appreciate Scandinavia’s favorite fish. 

BOOKS
image

The Water Is Wide

Bronwen Dickey considers Tim Butcher’s “Blood River: A Journey to Africa’s Broken Heart,” which takes readers deep into the Congo

SPEAKER'S CORNER
image

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
image

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
image

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
image

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.

ASK ROLF
image

How Should I Spend My Time in Spain?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

TRAVEL BLOG
6.28.06

Peter Hessler on World Hum’s Top 30 Travel Books

imageLast month, World Hum’s Top 30 Travel Books of all time included Peter Hessler’s River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze, which weighed in at number 20 on the list. Curious to know Hessler’s take on the Top 30—as well as his own suggestions for books that might have been included—I contacted him by e-mail as he toured the U.S. in support of his latest China book, Oracle Bones: A Journey Between China’s Past and Present.

This is what Pete told me:

Thanks, and I’m flattered. As for additions I’d definitely mention Blue Highways. And maybe On the Road. I guess that’s technically fiction, but it’s probably more “true” than The Road to Oxiana. I think that Bryson’s The Lost Continent is his best book, better than A Sunburned Country. Maybe The Great Railway Bazaar should be on the list two or three times. I’ve always felt like that’s about the perfect travel book. The Long Walk might belong as well. Capote’s The Muses Are Heard. Out of Africa. Darwin took a big trip. Christopher Columbus left some interesting journals. What’s the policy on works in translation? The fiction/nonfiction issue is also an odd one. It seems wrong that writers like Joseph Conrad and Graham Greene, who wrote so much about displacement and movement, aren’t on the list. The Martian Chronicles. Science fiction, at some level, is a type of travel writing, a response to the shrinking world. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a travel book. It’s about a journey, and it’s about that tension between settlement and movement, the sense of frontier and loss, that is at the heart of the American experience.

You know, I’m never certain how I feel about travel writing. I never conceived River Town as a travel book; it’s more about living and working in a place for two years. And although some of my New Yorker stories have been reprinted in travel writing anthologies, pretty much all of them are about a place where I’ve spent a decade. I have a Chinese driver’s license and I pay taxes to the People’s Republic. I live there. Usually I’m not traveling far for my research, and the stories aren’t about my personal experience; they are generally focused on Chinese people. But it seems that anything written about a foreign country automatically falls under the category of travel. Why isn’t Desert Solitaire on lists of great travel books? People generally don’t think of McPhee’s Coming into the Country as a travel book, but they would if Alaska happened to be in Russia.

Sometimes it seems that the idea of a travel book matters more than the book itself. There are certain classics of the genre, like A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush, which I don’t really connect with on a literary level. The writing isn’t particularly great; the journey isn’t particularly incredible; and the writer doesn’t speak the language and doesn’t bring much knowledge to his subject. But the book reflects the way that British adventurers and travelers perceived faraway places during that particular period a certain post-Empire, post-war mood. It’s about a moment when the British were coming to terms with a world that was suddenly much bigger and imposing than they had ever imagined during the years of Empire. And because of that quality, the book has acquired a certain extra-literary value. There’s a lot of meaning that isn’t necessarily contained within the pages.

The “genre,” at least as it’s defined, tends to be quite male dominated. I guess that’s partly because our concept of travel writing generally involves adventure and struggle; in many of these books there is a sort of combative relationship with the place. The risk is that it can become a sort of exotica. And another risk is that travel books sometimes don’t age well, because readers often need to connect with that extra-literary dimension. I guess this is why people sometimes wonder if travel writing is dead. I wouldn’t say that, but I sense that the “genre” is becoming more fluid and hard to define. Is Istanbul, by Orhan Pamuk, a travel book? He’s a native of Turkey and he’s lived in the same apartment building for fifty years. But he’s traveled between floors, so maybe it counts.

--Rolf Potts is a frequent contributor to World Hum.

Posted by Rolf Potts • 6.28.06
Categories: WeblogTop 30 Travel Books

Share this item at del.icio.us PermalinkComments (2)


COMMENTS

River Town was one of the best books I’ve read in the last 5 years or more in any genre.  Engrossing on so many levels, I was left with a keen appreciation of the value of a perserverant spirit, despite setbacks or mistakes, taking the good with the bad.

Loved the commentary above and, as a former Alaskan I will say, Coming into the Country nailed The Last Frontier.

By  on  6.29.06  at  04:31 PM

I recently got my newest issue of National Geographic Traveler, and saw a very brief mention of their top travel book picks.  The entire list can be found on their website, and yours seems to match up quite nicely.

By Mish Irish  on  6.29.06  at  10:01 PM


ADD YOUR COMMENT

We reserve the right to remove comments with profanity, personal attacks, spam, overt advertisements or other inappropriate material.

Name:
Email:
Location:
URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see here:



BLOG CATEGORIES

Adventure Travel
Afghanistan
Air Travel
'Airworld'
Africa
Alaska
Albania
Antarctica
Architecture and Travel
Argentina
Asia
Audio/Video
Australia
Bali
Bookstore Tourism
Belize
Ben's Place of the Week
Bhutan
Bolivia
Botswana
Brazil
Brand That Nation!
Budget Travel
Burma
California
Cambodia
Canada
Caribbean
Celebrity Travel Watch
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cruising
Cuba
Denmark
Czech Republic
Dominican Republic
Dubai
Eco-Travel
Ecuador
England
Egypt
El Salvador
Estonia
Ethiopia
Europe
Family Travel
Fiji
Finland
Florida
Food: The Moveable Feast
France
Geography for Fun and Profit
Germany
Georgia
Global Village
Ghana
Greece
Greenland
Guatemala
Guest Blogger: Thomas Swick
Guest Blogger: Michael Shapiro
Haiti
Hawaii
History Travel
Holland
Honduras
Hong Kong
Hot Americans on Television Botching Geography Questions
Hotels
Iceland
Icons: Ernest Hemingway
Icons: Che Guevara
Icons: Jack Kerouac
Icons: Mark Twain
In the News
India
Indonesia
Iowa
Iraq
Iran
Ireland
Islands
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kenya
Kosovo
Las Vegas
Latvia
Life of a Travel Writer
Lebanon
Libya
Literary Travel
Los Angeles
London
Malaysia
Mali
Media Addict
Mexico
Moldova
Mongolia
Morocco
Moscow
Movies and Travel
Music
Nation Branding
Nepal
New Orleans
New Travel Books
New York
New Zealand
9.11.01
Nicaragua
North America
North Korea
Norway
Outdoors
Page Turner
Pakistan
Paris
Peru
Planet Theme Park
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
R.I.P.
Road Trips
Romania
Russia
San Diego
San Francisco
Saudi Arabia
Scotland
Shameless Self-Promotion
Shanghai
Shrinking Planet Statistic of the Day
Singapore
Somalia
South Africa
South America
South Korea
Space Travel
Spain
Suriname
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan
Tanzania
Technology and Travel
Thailand
The Critics
Thomas Swick on Travel Writing
Three Great Books
Three Travel Books
Tibet
Tokyo
Top 30 Travel Books
Train Travel
Travel and Security
Travel Disease du Jour
Travel Fashion
Travel Headline of the Day
Travel Lexicon
Travel Photography
Travel-Terror Fatigue Index
Travel Tips
Travel Writer Book Tours
Tres Loco
Turkey
Ukraine
United States
Venezuela
Vietnam
Voluntourism
War and Travel
Washington D.C.
What We Loved This Week
What Would Edward Abbey Think?
Where in the World Are You?
Why We Travel
World Hum Travel Zeitgeist
Zambia