Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

Travel dispatches from a shrinking planet

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Q&A
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J. Maarten Troost: Enduring Pollution and Reptile-Laden Lunches in China For Our Benefit

David 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
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‘The Monster of Florence’: Murder and the Pursuit of Truth

Douglas 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 SLIDESHOW
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My Travels, My Feet

After 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


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Affairs to Remember—On-Screen and Off

From “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
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Seven Reasons to Have a Foreign Fling

Sure, having an overseas romance is fun. But Terry Ward points out seven other benefits to cross-border love, mon petit chou.

ASK ROLF
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As a Woman, Can I Really Travel Without Much Fear for my Safety?

Vagabonding traveler Rolf Potts answers your questions about travel

HOW TO
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Break Bread and Brie in France

Great 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 BLOG
8.29.07

In Washington D.C. and Paris, Seduced by a Night View

imageTwo recent stories on Paris and Washington D.C. after dark are a good reminder that taking in cityscapes by night can yield an entirely different travel experience than tromping around at mid-day. A Washington Post article and slide show on the patchwork system used to illuminate the monuments lining the National Mall nicely conveys the city’s nocturnal alter-ego, while a New York Times piece on ascending the Eiffel Tower at night actually made me want to brave the interminable line to try it. 

Of the nation’s capital, the Post’s Philip Kennicott writes: “At night, there is a second city that emerges in Washington, more beautiful and more intelligible than the city by day. The great monuments on the Mall glow a warm white, the grass and trees that surround them sink into inky darkness, and the city itself seems larger, more dramatic and more logically laid out.”

As someone who has spent most of her life in Washington, I heartily agree. Kennicott’s piece, in fact, triggered a vivid memory of my first glimpse of D.C., which came on a steamy, 1970s August night, courtesy of a family friend’s convertible. My parents had just packed up and moved the five of us from the Midwest, and I was scared to death at the prospect of starting third grade in foreign terrain.

I remember charging up the steps of a shimmering Lincoln Memorial, awestruck by the fatherly, outsized presence of Lincoln himself. I turned to catch the lights dancing off the Reflecting Pool and thought: This place might not be so bad after all.

Related on World Hum:
* Fire in the Night
* Paris Mayor to Parisians: Be Nice to Tourists, S’il Vous Plait

Photo by CrashingWaves via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

Posted by Julia Ross • 8.29.07
Categories: WeblogParisTravel PhotographyWashington D.C.

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COMMENTS

I wholeheartedly agree. A single August evening sitting next to my gorgeous tour guide on the back steps of the the Lincoln Memorial looking out over the water, and my own future sealed my fate. That night I fell hopelessly in love - one I shall never get over. So much so that 2 months later, I packed 2 suitcases and with a 1-way ticket in my hand, no place to stay, no job, no prospects, and no good excuse for my parents standing dumbfounded in O’Hare (I was 22 then) I returned to my city and this time it was for good.

DC is a far cry from Rock Falls, IL where I grew up. The people are very friendly and helpful, and just walking the streets, the Mall, the museums, and being a part of it all kept me in love with the area and helped me tolerate the traffic.

Having just gone back to the area this May with my kids made me fall in love all over again. Even though construction and urban sprawl has kept up with the rest of the country I remembered how to get to all my favorite haunts and all the backroads I took as a DC Insider. It felt like I had never left. DC had welcomed me home again. As my family and I were piling back into the minivan to drive back to Wisconsin where life is a little less exciting, George W is worlds away, traffic isn’t bad, and homes are cheaper, I realized a love I had lost. Looking in the rear-view mirror as we pulled out to leave, I took one last look in the hopes I’ll be able to return again some day...all because of that one August night. Thanks DC!

By Gretchen  on  8.29.07  at  08:10 PM

One of the best DC monuments lit up at night is the FDR Memorial, located along the Tidal Basin between the Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials. It’s a series of landscaped “rooms” illustrating the various periods in FDR’s presidency (Eleanor gets an alcove).  At night the crowds are gone and it’s very serene, with the sounds of the waterfalls drowning out traffic.  It’s open until midnight, and the lights are subtle and dramatic.

By Marilyn Terrell  on  8.30.07  at  08:59 AM

hi Washington is great city

By  on  2.28.08  at  11:10 AM

Great night view from the “capital of the world”

By  on  6.26.08  at  02:43 AM

Yeah, I still remember the awe I felt when I saw the washington monument in the reflecting pool from the Linclon memorial.

By  on  7.25.08  at  11:36 AM


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