Just finished reading Paul Theroux's latest book Ghost Train to the Eastern Star. I've read all of Theroux's travel books at least once and I enjoy them immensely. Not only do we experience exotic places as if we were there, but we also get spot on observations about travel and travelers, a review of the works of other writer's who experienced those same places, and often a bit of literary criticism or history of the English novel.
In the past 15 years, I've traveled to some of the places I read about in Theroux's books - India, Istanbul, Morocco, China - and others are on my list. However, with Ghost Train, I found myself in the new and interesting position of having already been to some of the places that he visits for the first time like Jodpur, Angkor Wat, Phnom Penh, and Hanoi.
I could ramble on about this book and Theroux but I'll instead leave you with the first two sentences of Ghost Train. Enjoy.
You think of travelers as bold, but our guilty secret is that travel is one of the laziest ways on earth of passing the time. Travel is not merely the business of being bone-idle, but also and elaborate bumming evasion, allowing you to call attention to ourselves with our conspicuous absence while we intrude upon other people's privacy - being actively offensive as fugitive freeloaders.
Sun-Ling and John have been traveling the earth since 2008 while blogging, eating vegetarian and vegan, and riding public transportation. We love uphill day hikes, 20th-century architecture, Roman ruins, all bodies of water, local markets, shopping for groceries, aqueducts, miradors, trip planning, blablacar, and more.
Search This Blog
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Most Recent Post
Sardinia: Capo Caccia
From Alghero, we managed to use the not so frequent off-season buses to make an outing to Capo Caccia. We first took the bus to its final st...
Most Popular Posts of Last 30 Days
-
When Indigo airlines canceled our Colombo-Hyderabad flight, we took India and Pakistan off our itinerary. Considering we are in the 10th yea...
-
We liked walking around Tunis looking at the many interesting buildings both in the medina and new city, this time as much as the last time....
-
Kerkouane is not a photogenic site, but was inscribed by UNESCO in 1985. Since it was abandoned after the First Punic War, it is the only Ph...
-
From Ajaccio we took the once daily, weekday only, overpriced bus to the village of Piana. I had wondered whether this special visit was wor...
-
From Yining, China, we began a somewhat difficult two-day journey to Karakol, Kyrgyzstan via Zharkent, Kazakhstan. The easy route would hav...
-
From Tunisia, we headed to Corsica and Sardinia. Normally we would have started from the south. However, since we wanted to be in Sardinia f...
-
A friend who had recently been to Tikal and Copan commented to us that he liked Copan better. Which of the two Mayan ruins would I like the...
No comments:
Post a Comment