Better than fiction True travel tales from great fiction writers

Book - 2012

"A collection of original travel stories told by some of the world's best novelists, including Isabel Allende, Peter Matthiessen, Alexander McCall Smith, Joyce Carol Oates, Téa Obreht, DBC Pierre"--P. [4] of cover.

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Subjects
Published
Melbourne ; Oakland, CA : Lonely Planet 2012.
Language
English
Other Authors
Donald W. George (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
320 p. ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781742205946
  • Introduction
  • Going South
  • Kind of Blue
  • Huaxi Watermill
  • Shooting Pompeii
  • The Mountain Mine
  • The Tin Can
  • Among Saudi Sands
  • Quetzal
  • Off the Beaten Track in Malawi
  • Adrift in the Solomon Islands
  • Confessions of a Coconut-Soup Eater
  • Sudan: The Scarface Express
  • Chasing Missionaries
  • In Bear Trap Canyon
  • A Tohunga with a Promise to Keep
  • Death Trip
  • A Visit to San Quentin
  • On My Way Home
  • You, Me and the Sea
  • The Fairbanks Shakespeare Camp
  • When Things Make No Sense
  • The Way to Hav
  • A Tango with Freud
  • Getting Travel Dirt Under Your Fingernails
  • A Small World after All
  • The Thieves of Rome
  • Arriving in Luxembourg
  • Mumbai: Before the Monsoon
  • An Alpine Escape
  • Who Wants a Girl?
  • Into Unknown Climes
  • Nuestro Pueblo
Review by Booklist Review

The intrepid adventurers at Lonely Planet continue to churn out imaginatively clever travel literature. This one combines travel with literary memoir as 32 reasonably well-known fiction writers recall some of their most remarkable experiences on the open road. While Frances Mayes, Joyce Carol Oates, Alexander McCall Smith, and Isabel Allende will be familiar to most, the travels of the lesser-known scribes are just as fascinating and fun. Seasoned editor George has also included a brief introduction to each piece, listing the books and outlining the literary credentials of its author. Armchair travelers will relish taking gorgeous, descriptive trips to Mexico, the Solomon Islands, Rome, Luxembourg, Java, and a host of other exotic and not-so exotic destinations.--Flanagan, Margaret Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This refreshing compilation of 32 travel essays by some of the world's best-known fiction writers offers intimate and offbeat impressions of places near and far. Included in this gem of a book are works by many familiar stylists, including Peter Matthiessen, Joyce Carol Oates, Frances Mayes, Pico Iyer, Jan Morris, and Kurt Anderson; others such as Saudi-born Keija Parssinen, 2005 Orange Prize for Fiction winner Marina Lewycka, and Booker- and Whitbread-prize winner DBC Pierre are less well-known but hardly less accomplished. Snaking around the globe via multiple modes of transport, the storytellers explore the Solomon Islands, the American highway, central Mexico, San Quentin prison, Antarctica, the Watts Towers, Malawi, the Sudan, and Bear Trap Canyon near Bozeman, Mont. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

While the adage is that truth is stranger than fiction, readers may find this collection of true stories-as its title promises-not only stranger, but better than fiction. This fantastic collection of 32 travel stories, edited by George (global travel editor, Lonely Planet; Lonely Planet Travel Writing), comes from some of the best fiction writers publishing today. These true travel tales range from events in the writer's distant past to recent adventures. They cover the globe from India to Alaska to San Quentin to Ireland and include entries from an eclectic mix of international writers, including Isabel Allende, Pico Iyer, Alexander McCall Smith, Jan Morris, and Tea Obreht. VERDICT A festive collection of travel stories from some amazing writers. The only thing lacking in this collection is more entries! Lovers of travel writing, as well as fans of fiction, will thoroughly enjoy this collection.-Melissa Aho, Univ. of Minnesota Lib., Minneapolis (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An uneven collection of pieces that extend and expand the typical notion of travel writing. The subtitle proclaims these "True Travel Tales from Great Fiction Writers," though the contents raise some issues. All of the included writers have written some fiction, but many are known as well (or even more) for their journalism, including Jan Morris, who has earned her reputation primarily as a travel writer (yet here writes of an imaginary destination). Some of the authors write not as travelers, but as immigrants who have made adjustments to a different home or adults who have made a homecoming. Others write of places where no traveler would likely visit--e.g., the cellblock of San Quentin, explored by Joyce Carol Oates in the longest and most emotionally powerful piece. Yet, cumulatively, they reinforce the assertion of Bryce Courtenay ("Australia's top-selling novelist") that "[g]ood travel is returning home a slightly bigger part of everyone and not quite the same person as when you set out." His essay, more of a trend piece than an illumination of a destination, is about how "personal adventure travel has come of age. For a great many of us, our travel mindset has largely changed from seeing to doing and from observing to participating." The most affectingly literary of the inclusions is by Britain's Stephen Kelman, on a reporting trip to India, where he realized that "the world is as weird and sad and beautiful as I would have it be, and that my place in it is as inevitable as the wind in the trees." Other notable contributors include Isabel Allende, Kurt Andersen, Pico Iyer, Alexander McCall Smith and Frances Mayes. Some interesting reading for armchair travelers.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.