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Title: A Sense of Place: Stories about Travel


1
A Sense of PlaceStories about Travel
  • In the BEHS Library

2
UNITED STATES
3
A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson
  • Brysons hilarious account of attempting to hike
    the Appalachian Trail. Paired with an out of
    shape hiking partner, he soon learns the dangers
    and difficulties of avoiding trailside traumas
    such as obnoxious hikers, overweight backpacks,
    and irritating, pesky creatures.

4
The Lost Continentby Bill Bryson
  • A travelogue by Bill Bryson is as close to a
    sure thing as funny books get. The Lost Continent
    is no exception. Following an urge to rediscover
    his youth (he should know better), the author
    leaves his native Des Moines, Iowa, in a journey
    that takes him across 38 states. Lucky for us, he
    brought a notebook. With a razor wit and a kind
    heart, Bryson serves up a colorful tale of
    boredom, kitsch, and beauty when you least expect
    it.

5
Confederates in the Attic by Tony Horowitz
  • Horowitz travels the American South and East
    Coast, visiting Civil War battlefields and
    reporting on the unusual people he meets.

6
Road Swing by Steve Rushin
  • Rushin, a reporter for Sports Illustrated,
    describes the year he took off from his job to
    visit famous and obscure sports sites throughout
    the U.S.

7
Blue Highways A Journey into Americaby William
Least Heat Moon

William Least Heat Moon tells of the time he
spent traveling the "blue highways"--backroads--of
American from the East to West Coasts, and the
unusual people met along the way.
8
Travels With Charley In Search of Americaby
John Steinbeck

Steinbeck traveled from coast to coast at sixty
years of age with his French poodle, Charley, and
made observations about nature and culture across
America.
9
Bad Land An American Romanceby Jonathan Raban
  • Examines the westward migration of homesteaders
    into the Montana and Dakota plains looking at the
    people who settled the area and the hardships
    they endured.

10
Travels With Lizbethby Lars Eighner
  • The author recounts his experiences with
    homelessness and the struggles that he and his
    dog faced in their life on the street.

11
Dharma Girl by Chelsea Cain
  • Cain, a lifelong Bellingham resident and the
    daughter of two former hippies, travels across
    the U.S. with her mother to discover her roots
    and revisit the commune where she spent her early
    years.

12
Refuge An Unnatural History of Time and
Placeby Terry Tempest Williams

When her mother is diagnosed with cancer,
Williams looks to the wilderness for answers
about how to cope and find peace. She found
solace in Utah, where the natural landscape,
beautiful and peaceful, was being threatened by
global warming.
13
Im a Stranger Here Myselfby Bill Bryson
  • The author, a U.S. born citizen who lived in
    England for twenty years, describes the
    experiences he had when he returned to America to
    live with his family. In a series of very funny
    essays, he comments on a variety of aspects of
    life in America and the differences between the
    U.S. and Britain.

14
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evilby John
Berendt
  • Shots rang out in Savannah's grandest mansion in
    the misty, early morning hours of May 2, 1981.
    Was it murder or self-defense? For nearly a
    decade, the shooting and its aftermath
    reverberated throughout this city. John
    Berendt's sharply observed, suspenseful, and
    witty narrative reads like a thoroughly
    engrossing novel, and yet it is a work of
    non-fiction. Berendt skillfully interweaves a
    hugely entertaining first-person account of life
    in this isolated remnant of the Old South with
    the unpredictable twists and turns of a landmark
    murder case.
  • It is a spellbinding story peopled by a gallery
    of remarkable characters the well-bred society
    ladies of the Married Woman's Card Club the
    turbulent young redneck gigolo the hapless
    recluse who owns a bottle of poison so powerful
    it could kill every man, woman, and child in
    Savannah the aging and profane Southern belle
    who is the 'soul of pampered self-absorption'
    the uproariously funny black drag queen the
    acerbic and arrogant antiques dealer the
    sweet-talking, piano-playing con artist young
    blacks dancing the minuet at the black debutante
    ball and Minerva, the voodoo priestess who works
    her magic in the graveyard at midnight.
  • These and other Savannahians act as a Greek
    chorus, with Berendt revealing the alliances,
    hostilities, and intrigues that thrive in a town
    where everyone knows everyone else. Midnight in
    the Garden of Good and Evil A Savannah Story is
    a sublime and seductive reading experience.
    Brilliantly conceived and masterfully written,
    this enormously engaging portrait of a most
    beguiling Southern city is certain to become a
    modern classic.(Barnes and Noble.com).

15
Driving Mr. Albert A Trip Across America with
Einsteins Brainby Michael Paterniti
  • Paterniti follows up on a story he once heard
    that Einsteins brain has been stored, since his
    death, in a Tupperware container, in a basement
    in New Jersey. When he learns the story is true,
    he tracks down the man who is storing the brain,
    and the two of them decide to travel across the
    country to deliver it to Einstiens last living
    relative.

16
The Legacy of Lunaby Julia Butterfly Hill
  • Julia Butterfly Hill spend a year living in an
    ancient cedar tree named Luna to try to stop
    the Maxaam Corporation from chopping down the
    tree as part of their clear-cutting. Hills
    story is one about environmentalism, courage, and
    the rescue of the natural Californian landscape.

17
Into the Wildby Jon Krakauer
  • Krakauer retraces the steps across the American
    West that were followed by Chris McCandless, a
    young man from a well-to-do family who
    mysteriously forfeited his inheritance to live
    alone in the wilderness of Alaska but was found
    dead only months after beginning his journey.

18
All Over But the Shoutinby Rick Bragg
  • Rick Bragg tells of his mother, who
    single-handedly raised three sons while working
    as a cotton-picker and ironing woman in the
    South. Bragg attributes his success as a
    journalist (he has won the Pulitzer Prize) to his
    mothers sacrifices, which allowed him to go to
    school rather than work, and then edge his way up
    the ladder of success in his profession.

19
AFRICA
20
The Shadow of KilimanjaroOn Foot Across East
Africaby Rick Ridgeway
  • The author shares the story of his experiences
    while on a five-hundred-kilometer walking tour of
    East Africa from Mt. Kilimanjaro to the shores of
    the Indian Ocean and discusses some of the
    environmental issues that are threatening the
    land.

21
Looking for Lovedu Days and Nights in Africaby
Ann Jones

When Ann Jones decided to travel overland from
Tangier to the southern tip of Africa with an
Englishman she barely knew, she lived firsthand
the worst and best of travel. Muggleton, at 28
half Jones's age and twice her size, turns out to
be a road warrior with a foul temper who insists
on charging headlong across a continent with
practically no roads. The chasms of mud and water
that cover the "roads" of Zaire cause the duo
innumerable hardships and frustrations. Muggleton
comes down with malaria, Jones's feet turn gray
and her toenails fall off, the jeep falls to
pieces--all to cover in five days what passing
Africans walk in two.
22
Malaria Dreams An African Adventure.By
Stuart Stevens 
  • Malaria Dreams is a tale of high adventure
    across Africa, recounted with the wit and humor
    that delighted readers of Night Train to
    Turkistan, Stuart Stevens's highly praised first
    book. The story begins when a "geologist" friend
    mentions to Stevens that he has a Land Rover in
    the Central African Republic which he'd like to
    get back to Europe. It's only later, when Stevens
    discovers that half of Africa thinks his friend
    is a spy and the other half is convinced he's a
    diamond smuggler, that the intrepid author begins
    to realize he should have asked a few more
    questions before leaving home. And then there's
    the small problem of the Land Rover's seizure by
    the minister of mines, who has appropriated it as
    his personal car. It is a new Land Rover. The
    minister likes it very much.
  • Three months later, Stevens and his
    twenty-three-year-old companion (the only woman
    to ever transfer from Bryn Mawr to the University
    of Oklahoma) have somehow managed to drive-though
    not in the ill-fated Land Rover-across the
    wildest part of Africa, emerging scathed but
    still alive on the shores of the Mediterranean.
  • Malaria Dreams takes readers along on close
    encounters with killer ants in Cameroon,
    revolutionary soldiers in the middle of Lake Chad
    (a huge mudhole lacking any water), and strangely
    frenzied Peace Corps parties in Niger. There's a
    long search for a functional set of springs in
    Timbuktu and near disastrous bouts with sickness
    and automotive malfunctions in the middle of the
    Sahara.
  • Through it all, Stevens and his ex-fashion model
    companion battle the odds, and often each other,
    to return home to tell this unlikely, highly
    amusing tale.

23
The Names of Things A Passage in the Egyptian
Desertby Susan Brind Morrow
  • Susan Brind Morrow takes readers from her
    magical and sometimes troubled childhood in New
    York State, to the austere splendors of the
    Egyptian desert. Written with a keen
    understanding of language, Brind Morrow traces
    the routes of ideas and images through word
    origins and time, bringing forth an inner life of
    words. (Publishers notes).

24
Take Me With Youby Brad Newsham
  • After two decades of travels around the world,
    Brad Newsham decides to pack his bags again to
    return the gift of magic that travel has brought
    into his life. His plan is to give a little of
    that back to someone he meets along the way--to
    invite a new untraveled friend to visit him,
    all-expenses paid, in America. Over the course of
    100 days through the Philippines, India, Egypt,
    Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and South Africa, he
    asks, "What would these people make of my
    culture?

25
AUSTRALIA
26
In a Sunburned Country by Bill Bryson
  • Australia, Bryson informs us in his hilarious
    travelogue, has more things that can kill you
    than any other continentand then he goes about
    telling us stories of various travelers and their
    unfortunate encounters with these dangers. In
    the meantime, he also tells a very funny story of
    his own journey through the land down under.

27
The Lost Tribe A Harrowing Passage into New
Guineas Heart of Darknessby Edward Marriott
  • The author shares his experiences searching for
    the Liawep tribe, a group of less than one
    hundred natives found living in the deep jungle
    of Papua New Guinea in 1993, and discusses what
    happened to the small society of primitive people
    when they were confronted with modern life.

28
ANTARCTICA
29
Mrs. Chippys Last Expeditionby Caroline
Alexander
  • A fact-based memoir in which Mrs. Chippy, a male
    cat belonging to the ship on which Sir Ernest
    Shackleton set out to explore Antarctica in 1914,
    discusses his role in keeping the expedition on
    the right track.

30
The Endurance Shackletons Legendary Antarctic
Expeditionby Caroline Alexander
  • Provides an account of the Shackleton expedition
    of 1914, during which explorer Ernest Shackleton
    and his crew of twenty-seven set out to cross the
    Antarctic continent on foot, only to have their
    ship, Endurance, break up eighty-five miles short
    of their destination, leaving them stranded for
    close to two years. Includes a photographic
    record of the adventure.

31
The Artarctic Challengedby Admiral Lord
Mountevans
  • Mountevans is the only living survivor of an
    expedition to Antarctica made by Scott in the
    International Geophysics Year (1956-9). He
    reviews all that is known about the Antarctic
    down to the 1956 expeditions and summarizes the
    dangerous features of the continent, the
    hardships there, and the possible valuable
    discoveries that were yet to be made.

32
THE MIDDLE EAST and ASIA
33
Honeymoon in Purdah by Alison Wearing
  • A collection of essays in which Canadian Alison
    Wearing reflects on the experiences she had while
    traveling through Iran and the wide variety of
    people she met while she was there. Her essays
    offer a humorous, insightful perspective on the
    land, people, culture, and politics of the
    country.

34
Seven Years in Tibetby Heinrich Harrer
  • Originally published in 1953, this adventure
    classic recounts Austrian mountaineer Heinrich
    Harrer's 1943 escape from a British internment
    camp in India, his daring trek across the
    Himalayas, and his happy sojourn in Tibet, then,
    as now, a remote land little visited by
    foreigners. Warmly welcomed, he eventually became
    tutor to the Dalai Lama, teenaged god-king of the
    theocratic nation. The author's vivid
    descriptions of Tibetan rites and customs capture
    its unique traditions before the Chinese invasion
    in 1950, which prompted Harrer's departure. A
    1996 epilogue details the genocidal havoc wrought
    over the past half-century.

35
The Snow Leopardby Peter Matthiesen
  • In the autumn of 1973, the writer Peter
    Matthiessen set out in the company of zoologist
    George Schaller on a hike that would take them
    250 miles into the heart of the Himalayan region
    of Dolpo, "the last enclave of pure Tibetan
    culture on earth." Their voyage was in quest of
    one of the world's most elusive big cats, the
    snow leopard of high Asia, a creature so rarely
    spotted as to be nearly mythical Schaller was
    one of only two Westerners known to have seen a
    snow leopard in the wild since 1950.

36
All the Way to Heavenby Stephen Alter
  • Stephen Alter chronicles the experiences he had
    as he spent his childhood living at a hill
    station in the Himalayas and discusses how he and
    his brothers combined their American heritage
    with the Indian culture.

37
Iron and Silkby Mark Salzman
  • The author recalls, in a series of humorous and
    serious essays, his experiences living in China,
    where he was a teacher of English and a student
    of martial arts.

38
Big Snake The Hunt for the Worlds Longest
Pythonby Robert Twigger
  • Poet Robert Twigger sets out in East Asia to
    claim a prize established by Theodore Roosevelt
    to reward anyone who captured alive the longest
    snake in the world. In the 86 years that the
    prize went unclaimed, the money grew from 1000
    to 50,000 and Twigger was determined to earn it,
    so he set off to find the snakewithout
    experience or a strategy.

39
Night Train to Turkistan Modern Adventures
Along Chinas Ancient Silk Roadby Stuart Stevens
  • A very funny account of Stevens journey to
    Chinese Turkistan, which had been closed to
    visitors since 1949.

40
Talking to High Monks in the Snow An Asian
American Odysseyby Lydia Minatoya
  • Lydia Minatoya, a Japanese American, returns to
    her ancestral village in Japan, where her
    "reunion" with distant family members is both
    hilarious and moving.

41
Within Reach My Everest Storyby Mark Pfetzer
  • The author describes how he spent his teenage
    years climbing mountains in the United States,
    South America, Africa, and Asia, with an emphasis
    on his two expeditions up Mount Everest.

42
Into Thin Air A Personal Account of the Everest
Disaster by Jon Krakauer
  • In the spring of 1996, twelve climbers perished
    on Mount Everest. Some were experienced
    mountaineers, but several were notthey were
    wealthy individuals who had paid for the
    opportunity to summit the worlds most formidable
    mountain. Krakauer, a climber in another group,
    was nevertheless a part of the tragedy and in
    this account of the events, he admits guilt over
    what happened, and wonders whether he could have
    something that would have prevented the tragedy.

43
FRANCE
44
Encore ProvenceNew Adventures in the South of
Franceby Peter Mayle
  • After returning briefly to the United States,
    the author goes back to his home in Southern
    France and resumes his life as a permanent guest
    of the French people. His tales of life abroad
    paint a humorous picture of the French people and
    culture.

45
ITALY
46
Under the Tuscan Sunby Frances Mayes
  • Frances Mayes starts off by saying "I am about
    to buy a house in a foreign country. A house with
    the beautiful name of Bramasole." Tall, square
    and apricot-colored with faded green shutters,
    the lovely old farm house that Frances and her
    husband buy is in Tuscany. They return every
    summer, they tend the olives and grapes, they
    plant potatoes and build a stone wall. The book
    has Tuscan soil under its fingernails, Tuscan sun
    on its back and the flavor of Tuscany throughout.

47
Bella Tuscanyby Frances Mayes
  • Following up on her bestselling novel, Under the
    Tuscan Sun, Frances Mayes returns to her beloved
    villa in the small hill town of Cortona, Italy.
    Welcomed back like an old friend, she is soon
    puttering in the garden, and as Mayes devotees
    might expect, busy in the kitchen as well. As
    Mayes rediscovers her taste for la dolce vita,
    she embarks on a journey of cultural awakening
    and embraces a newfound romance with the Italian
    language and people. (www.amazon.com)

48
SOUTH AMERICA
49
Along the Inca RoadA Womans Journey into an
Ancient Empireby Karin Muller
  • Amazon.com What's an American woman doing
    shaking a pink cape at a bull on a hillside in
    Peru? Ask Karin Muller, a self-described vagabond
    who is game for anything, especially if it's a
    traditionally male task in strictly sex
    role-divided South America. After years of
    contemplating the thin red line of the Inca Road
    on her map of the world, Muller takes off with a
    grant from the National Geographic Society (which
    also supplied a cameraman) for a six-month jaunt
    through Ecuador, Peru, Brazil, and Chile. Along
    the way, she searches for remnants of the ancient
    stone-paved road and jumps headfirst into
    whatever adventure she can find. First stop, a
    cuy doctor whacks her on the back and head with a
    whimpering guinea pig, then offers her a
    diagnosis based on the quality of the animal's
    intestines. She's tear-gassed in an indigenous
    antigovernment protest, and dresses in an orange
    cloak, gold sparkles, and black face paint (a
    concoction made of tar and animal fat) to pull a
    200-pound roast pig during the Festival of Mama
    Negra. In a surreal moment, she witnesses the
    mysterious crash of a Brazilian military
    helicopter in the Andean highlands, and in a
    horrific one, crawls through a mole-like tunnel
    deep into a mountainside where men spend years
    digging for gold, leaving only to eat, wash, and
    haul their ore 423 steps to a giant crushing
    machine. She even watches a military crew clear
    live mines planted by Peruvians during the
    Ecuador-Peruvian border war.
  • Throughout her adventures, Muller weaves a
    lively history of the rise and fall of the Incan
    empire.

50
Pass the Butterwormsby Tim Cahill
  • "Outside" magazine editor Tim Cahill tells of
    his adventures and exotic dining experiences in
    remote areas of the world such as Honduras, Peru,
    Iranian Jaya, and the North Pole.

51
Road Fever A High-Speed Travelogueby Tim Cahill
  • If you define "adventure travel" as anything
    that's more fun to read about than to live
    through, then Tim Cahill's Road Fever is the
    adventure of a lifetime. Along with professional
    long-distance driver Garry Sowerby, Cahill drove
    15,000 miles from the southernmost tip of Tierra
    del Fuego to the northernmost terminus of the
    Dalton Highway in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, from one
    end of the world to another, in a record-breaking
    23 1/2 days. Just like the authors'
    camper-shelled GMC Sierra truck, the narrative
    bounces along at a relentless pace. Along the way
    Cahill and Sowerby cope with mood swings, engine
    trouble, Andean cliffs, obstinate bureaucracies,
    slick highways, armed and uncomprehending
    soldiery (not to mention the challenges of
    securing O.P.M., or Other People's Money--the
    sine qua non of adventure, Cahill observes).
    Author of such off-the-wall travelogues as Pass
    the Butterworms and Jaguars Ripped My Flesh,
    Cahill is equipped with the correct amalgam of
    chutzpah and dementia to survive what can only be
    called "The Road Trip From Hell." Readers,
    however, will thoroughly enjoy themselves.

52
Running the Amazon by Joe Kane
  • In 1985 a team of hand-picked adventurers,
    including writer Joe Kane, embarked on a journey
    that would take them to the remote headwaters of
    the Amazon Basin. But that was just the beginning
    of the trip. Their goal to navigate the world's
    longest river from source to mouth, a feat never
    before recorded. After reaching (via a goat
    trail) a glacial trickle above 17,000
    feet--debatably the farthest source of the
    Amazon--the team descends to a point where kayaks
    can be deployed. From there the trip entails
    kayaking through one of the nastiest white-water
    canyons on the planet, a stretch of water that
    has previously claimed the lives or quickly
    halted the plans of all who attempted to conquer
    it navigating an unmapped gorge known
    affectionately as the Abyss sneaking through the
    "Red Zone," an area closed to foreigners and
    occupied by the notorious Shining Path rebels
    and, finally, paddling to the Atlantic by sea
    kayak through 3,000 miles of hot jungle.
  • Hired initially to chronicle the project from
    dry land, Kane quickly assumes a more integral
    role as a much-needed paddler, and as such he is
    able to provide vivid, first-hand descriptions of
    the treacherous water encountered. But in many
    ways the water is the least imposing obstacle to
    success. Along the way the team is beset by
    financial difficulties, a crisis of leadership,
    attacks from armed rebels, and the defection of
    team members. Kane's account of this six-month
    ordeal is much more than a travelogue of athletic
    endeavor--it's a fascinating portrait of the
    planning, politics, and personal struggles
    involved in mounting a modern-day expedition
    through a vast expanse of largely uncharted
    territory.

53
American Chicaby Marie Arana
  • The author, who grew up in Peru in the 1950s,
    was surrounded by native servants who filled her
    with magical legends and tales of fearsome
    spirits when she moved to New Jersey with her
    family in 1959, the author found herself slipping
    between cultures and choosing when to be American
    and when to be Peruvian.

54
My Old Man and the SeaA Father and Son Sail
Around Cape Hornby David Hays and Daniel Hays
  • The account of a father and son's voyage from
    New London, Connecticut, around Cape Horn, and
    back in a 25 foot boat.

55
SPAIN
56
Driving Over Lemonsby Chris Stewart
  • When English sheep shearer Chris Stewart (once a
    drummer for Genesis) bought an isolated farmhouse
    in the mountains outside of Granada, Spain, he
    was fully aware that it didn't have electricity,
    running water, or access to roads. But he had
    little idea of the headaches and hilarity that
    would follow (including scorpions, runaway sheep,
    and the former owner who won't budge). This
    rip-roaringly funny book about seeking a place in
    an earthy community of peasants and shepherds
    gives a realistic sense of the hassles and
    rewards of foreign relocation. Stewart's
    hilarious and beautifully written passages are
    deep in their honest perceptions of the place and
    the sometimes xenophobic natives, whose reception
    of the newcomers ranges from warm to gruff.
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