Hardie Karges has one self-professed goal in life: to see every country in the world.
And he’s off to a grand start!
His recently self-published book, Hypertravel -100 Countries in Two Years is less about Karges’ journey to most of the countries defined by the United Nations as countries, and more of a journey into Karges’ mind.
That’s not to say we don’t get some powerful and startling insights into the countries, villages, bus depots, airports, marketplaces, cafes, cities and dumps he wanders through. We do.
It’s just that the three-hundred plus page book is really Karges talking to himself and our listening in as he skewers a country (Djibouti sucks, and can’t make a good cup of coffee). Or as he makes an off-handed comment about a national characteristic: “There is something peaceful about the Iranian character, likewise rigor mortis.”
But don’t for one minute underestimate Karges.
His humor and tongue-in-cheek approach belies astute observations about the countries of the world, their people, cultures and traditions.
His hopscotching the globe could not have been accomplished with heavy reliance on the Internet, and his desperate search for WiFi spots is one of the humorous high points of the book.
But so is his exhausting mastery of bus and train schedules, the art of ticketing convoluted flights that often take him back to a destination, in order to go forward, just so he could go further back from where he started.
This travel legerdemain requires fortitude, street-smarts, planning and tremendous sense of curiosity coupled with life-saving humor and patience.
But I especially love Karges’ sense of irreverence.
Take the Italian island of Rimini, for example, the celebrated seaside resort along Italy’s Adriatic coast. For most travelers, it’s a place for the rich and famously tanned beautiful bodies.
For Karges, however, in the summer, it “must be an anthill of sun-burned tourist butts strolling down the street in search of pizze and gelati.”
Or his initial impression of Cairo at midnight as as “halogen heaven.”
But between seemingly endless searches for visas, hotels with Wi Fi, cheap buses and random airlines to take him to even more random places like Somaliland (is that even a country?), the author shares a running commentary on everything from religious overtones of Islamic or Christian enclaves, to the street touts who try to scheme him.
Hypertravel is a guide book of sorts, but not the kind one reads for bus schedules and generic places like “the Middle East.” Karges unravels the places he visits, and if he doesn’t go very deeply, he more often than not strikes a true chord with an honest, clear-eyed look at who he is and who the people he meets are.
He’s married, and now and again confesses to utter exhaustion and looking forward to his reunion with his wife in Los Angeles. As to why he undertook the mind- boggling trip, his answer, again, is disarmingly simple: “ My goal was and is to see every country in the world.”
There is one serious omission in his book, and one I was surprised to discover: The total lack of illustrations and maps.
It’s inconceivable that a travel book such as his would not have visual summaries and examples of his journey. The reader, I’m sure, will grab his or her atlas and try to follow his routes. He could have made his book more appealing and interesting if he had supplied some of these reference points for us.
Karges may or may not be a modern day Ibn Batuta or Marco Polo, but he wrote a fun and informative travel journal that really should be read.
To see what this intrepid traveler looks like (and who his friends are), check out his Facebook page.
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Comments
Call me Hardie, Kaleel, that's the name I go by. I did see the other sites and already posted Technorati to my FB page. I only saw this one because I was checking on a blog feature from Marshall Islands from a trip just completed. I wonder why this site doesn't come up in a Google search, hmmm...
Glad you liked the book,
Hardie K
http://hyper-travel.blogspot.com/
https://www.amazon.com/author/hardiekarges
Earl, thanks for writing in and especially on Tripatini, where the conversation is always provocative. I assume you also saw the reviews on Technorati and New Media Travel. We also Tweeted the review from the three sites we're authorized to Tweet from.
Ir was a fun book, and my comment about the lunacy of the travel was an affectionate one. What you did was daunting and would have broken a lesser spirit. But I'm glad you did it :)
All the best. Stay healthy and in touch
I've traveled for 30-40 years and lived and worked in several countries and speak several languages. This particular project came AFTER all that, and after several years of rumination finally took on a life of its own when the circumstances became appropriate. I reiterate that neither 100 countries nor 2 years were particular goals, merely results. I'm a pretty sane guy, actually :-)
p.s. thanks, Kaleel, for capturing the spirit pretty accurately. I guess we're in the same cohort.
http://hyper-travel.blogspot.com/
https://www.amazon.com/author/hardiekarges
Thanks for writing in
I did things like this when I was young and racing through Europe and the Americas but I wouldnt do it now because its better to stop and hike and hang out in a bar, make friends and people watch. Hope I didnt disappoint you two by not being a lunatic any more!
Well, Karges is a bit of a lunatic, Ed, and does an amazing if superhuman job of visiting and recording his impressions of all those lands, places and people.
Not to suggest lunacy and Tripatini are related, but if anyone could pull of that kind of travel, its doubtless someone in this cohort :)
Sounds like a great read, so here's the question for those of you reading Kaleel's review: Would you like to pull off a feat like visiting 100 countries in two years? And why is your answer what it is?