Books and apps to travel with and because of. What's helpful, hot, or simply cool in print out there these days?' Weigh in on our comment wall and discussion groups below!


Cover photo: Bulat Silvia

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6 of the greatest English-language travel books of all time

Peshkova Long before cheap flights and map apps, travel writing offered vicarious passage to distant places, and that impulse remains powerful. A good travel book collapses distance and time, letting us inhabit landscapes, cultures, and states of mind we may never physically reach. Even today, when information is abundant, good, thoughtful travel writing offers something rarer: meaning shaped by experience, not just facts.One obvious pleasure is vicarious escape. Travel books allow readers to…

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The fascinating story of a medieval Buddhist pilgrim's 5,000-mile odyssey

    Travel usually involves a lot of planning and packing and booking and backtracking. At age 70, though, there are many new ways to travel. For one thing, there is time travel, which is what I call revisiting a place that I visited long ago, just to see all the ch-ch-ch-changes, maybe even recognize somebody from the old days. I’d done this before and did it again during the pandemic, when my usual Asian haunts were locked down tighter than a you-fill-in-the-blank and so I reverted to my…

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10 terrific adventure travel books to inspire wanderlust

  Bulat Silvia Adventure travel is all about delving into the unknown, and more often than not, also getting out of your comfort zone. So if that appeals to you, here's a dozen terrific travel reads from people who left their own comfort zones to follow their dreams and seek out new cultures and experiences. There's something old and something new; several you might know, and many others you probably haven't heard of, plus a good representation of female voices. What they have in common is…

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Best travel reads of the year

  The top ten picks of the 2022 crop from the award-winning outdoor adventure blog Atlas & Boots include a grumpy hiker’s outing in the mountains; one man’s take on slavery and racism in the oldest city on the Mississippi River; a mother’s attempt to escape poverty by tracing whales to Alaska; and a historian’s portrait of the most isolated tribe in the world, on North Sentinel Island.  To check it out, click here.    

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  • I happened to catch this after summer, but anyway, an interesting mix of books here, from The LGBTQ+ Travel Guide from Lonely Planet to very literary takes like Giovanni´s Room by James Baldwin, which I read many years ago and now am curious to reread https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/queer-travel-books
    10 Queer Travel Books to Read This Summer
    From Paris to Antartica, these LGBTQ+ reads explore the world through continent-spanning bus rides and meandering road trips.
  • I recently read this very informative and thought-provoking book, called "The New Tourist: Waking Up to the Power and Perils of Travel" by Paige McClanahan, which has landed on a number of 2024 "best travel books" lists. It´s not a travelogue but a look at tourism globally and the issues that surround it, such as overtourism and climate change. And for me one of the key takeaways is "travel mindfully." Highly recommended!
  • Nomadic Matt is one of the travel websites I enjoy following, and here´s his recently updated list of travel reads - a mix of contemporary and older classics: https://www.nomadicmatt.com/travel-blogs/thirteen-travel-books/
    Best Travel Books: 15 Books to Give You Serious Wanderlust
  • As one of its "best for 2023" articles, Condé Nast Traveler just published its list of nine must-read travel books: https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/books-to-spark-your-wanderlust
    9 Books to Spark Your Wanderlust in 2023
    Our editors on their favorite books they read over the past year.
  • Last year the British Condé Nast Traveller came out with a distinguished list of literary works to inform your travels before visiting a number of destinations: a moveable feast, indeed: https://www.cntraveller.com/gallery/best-travel-books
  • A pretty interesting piece just came out in the Washington Post on the future of travel guidebooks post pandemic (if that's what you can call the period we're in), including imput from Rick Steves and my old friend and onetime colleague Pauline Frommer: https://www.washingtonpost.com/travel/2022/03/04/guidebooks-travel-...
    Travel guidebooks aren’t dead, but they’ll never be the same. Maybe that’s a good thing.
    Rapidly changing guidebook styles can tell us a lot about the evolution of travel.
  • Veteran travel writer Dervla Murphy just reviewed my new guidebook to Palestine in British travel glossy Wanderlust... more in my blog post here.

  • Lost Angel Walkabout on top ten for 2011

    My travel collection was selected author Yolanda Renee's top ten for 2011. She shares what when into her choices in this half hour radio show.

    Cheers and Happy New Year Linda

  • I'd like to introduce me new literaryv travel guide to Istanbul.Istanbul, City of the Green_Eyed Beauty. Following the footsteps of writers Pierre Loti, Barbara Nadel and Orhan Pamuk, I explore districts abd sites of Istanbul which are off the beaten path as well as shedding a different light on some better known places. Read the introduction and a summary and look at some of the book's pictures on the special page of my blog, www.glamourgrannytravels.com/book.
  • I love books that tell a great story but I want to learn something at the same time. I knew that since Tripatini member Linda Ballou was a travel writer that I would learn about Hawaii but what I didn't realize is that she is a beautiful writer. This story takes place at the time in history where the Hawaiians are introduced to the Europeans as seen from the Hawaiian viewpoint. It is a story about a strong woman living in a country warlike country. Just get that picture of peaceful Hawaiians out of your head. She weaves a tale that keeps you intrigued all the way to the end. This is a great read about a fierce heroine. In fact, I liked the story so much I asked Linda to do an interview for my blog.  Follow this link to read her interview. http://thebesttravelnovels.blogspot.com/2011/10/travel-to-hawaii-wi...

    If any of the rest of you have novels set in a foreign land please let me know at carabertoia@yahoo.com

     

    TRAVEL TO HAWAII WITH WAI-NANI HIGH CHIEFESS OF HAWAII: HER EPIC JOURNEY
    I love books that tell a great story but I want to learn something at the same time. I knew that since Linda Ballou was a travel writer that...
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