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Friday November 21, 2008

Biographies & Memoirs: Travel


Displayed below are the top selling items for today, Friday November 21, 2008 along with the review customers have voted "most useful".

To find top selling items in for a specific category, use the menu on the left or click here to see all categories.
  1. Travels by Michael Crichton
  2. Walk Across America, A by Peter Jenkins
  3. Eat, Pray, Love : One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia by Elizabeth Gilbert
  4. Into the Wild (MTI) by Jon Krakauer
  5. A Thousand Days in Venice (Ballantine Reader's Circle) by Marlena De Blasi
  6. Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer
  7. Eat, Pray, Love : One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia by Elizabeth Gilbert
  8. I'm a Stranger Here Myself : Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away by Bill Bryson
  9. Solitude : Seeking Wisdom in Extremes by Robert Kull
  10. In Search of Captain Zero : A Surfer's Road Trip Beyond the End of the Road by Allan Weisbecker
Click here to view all 68 top sellers in this category



Travels

by Michael Crichton
(based on 134 customer reviews)

Travels (Paperback)
Author: Michael Crichton
Publisher: Harper Paperbacks


Price: $10.17
You save: $4.78 (32%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
45 out of 50 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 4/18/00

A book that changed me.

I admit I did not buy this book. I found it in the lost-and-found bin at work; thumbed through some passages during lunch breaks; waited 30 days until no one claimed it, and took it.

Only when I read it through did I realize this is one of the most important books I own.

I am not well-traveled, but enjoy Crichton's fictional work, from "Andromeda Strain" to "Jurassic Park." He is obviously intelligent, imaginative, and writes well. His adventures abroad are fascinating. But what changed my life and the lives of several people I know are the recountings of inner experiences: the things no rational person acknowledges day-to-day.

In this book, Michael Crichton- a medical student- admits to finding Ram Dass's New Age viewpoint puzzling and strange at first. In subsequent chapters, he quits his promising medical career to pursue writing. From there his exploits become stuff of fantasy; shooting a film with Sean Connery, traveling to countries he had previously never heard of, becoming rationally convinced that auras are real and can be seen.

This is a book I read that transformed me from a skeptic to an open-minded pragmatist. That may seem like schlock at first, but think about it. Do you have the opportunity and means to travel to Thailand, or Hunza? Have you consulted intuitive psychics from around the world, or sliced open a cadaver?

Buy this book. It may inspire you to explore inner realities like me, or reassure your agnostic point of view. In any case, you will read wondrous descriptions of Crichton's personal journeys. You will be compelled.

Click here to see more reviews for: Travels

Walk Across America, A

by Peter Jenkins
(based on 98 customer reviews)

Walk Across America, A (Paperback)
Edition: 1
Author: Peter Jenkins
Publisher: Harper Paperbacks


Price: $11.20
You save: $2.80 (20%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
18 out of 18 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 6/24/00

One of my Top 5 Favorite Books of All Time!

Peter Jenkins story of his 1973-1975 walk from New York to New Orleans is one of those books that you just can not put done once you have started. You will find yourself thinking about the book when you should be doing other things and you can't wait to pick it up again. When I finished reading the book I wanted more. I even purchased the old April 1977 National Geographic Magazine to read his article that he wrote for them and see even more of the pictures of his journey. Luckly, Jenkins journey does not stop in New Orleans, his walk continues and so do his books: The Walk West, The Road Unseen, Close Friends, and Across China.

Peter Jenkins says, "I started out searching for myself and my country and found both." The story would have been good enough just hearing about the trip, the things that he saw, how he survived, and the companionship of his faithful dog; but what make the book great is the people. The people that he meets, how they accept him, and in some cases don't. It is the sociology as well as the adventure that make this one of the best books I ever read for pleasure.

Click here to see more reviews for: Walk Across America, A

Eat, Pray, Love

One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia

by Elizabeth Gilbert
(based on 1730 customer reviews)

Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia (Paperback)
Author: Elizabeth Gilbert
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)


Price: $9.00
You save: $6.00 (40%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
279 out of 398 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 2/26/06

HER OWN SEARCH - HER OWN VOICE, BOTH IMPRESSIVE


Reading the subtitle of Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book, "One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia," one can only think well, she certainly knows where to look! Also, upon learning that this is her chosen way of recovering from a particularly acrimonious divorce and a trying-to-make-up-for-that-loss romance that didn't work, we might think how fortunate she is to able to seek solace in such intriguing places.

Whatever our opinion of her reasons for this journey it has been established that she's a super writer (The Last American Man), and she brings all of her wit, intellect and stylish pen to Eat Pray Love. More than that, she brought a great deal of courage to her chosen task of traveling the world alone at the age of 34. She felt she needed a dramatic change, and it may be that she has found it.

It's a pleasure to listen to this memoir/travelogue in her voice. Many will associate with her initial confession that she's not a very good traveler in that she suffers from various digestive interruptions. However, on the plus side she easily makes friends with anyone. As she puts it, "I can make friends with the dead." Or, if there isn't anyone around she claims that she could chat with a pile of Sheetrock. Whatever the case, she is a very lucky lady as her travel experiences prove.

No Viva Italia for Italy because of Messina, a port town in Sicily that she describes as "scary and suspicious." Perhaps that's one reason why she's lonely and depressed there. But things definitely take a turn for the better in India and Indonesia, although her meditation needs a little more work.

Did Gilbert find what she was searching for? Listeners may not be too sure but they'll certainly enjoy the trip!

- Gail Cooke


Click here to see more reviews for: Eat, Pray, Love

Into the Wild (MTI)

by Jon Krakauer
(based on 1219 customer reviews)

Into the Wild (MTI) (Paperback)
Author: Jon Krakauer
Publisher: Anchor


Price: $11.16
You save: $2.79 (20%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
318 out of 333 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 7/20/00

Brilliant and Unforgettable

There is little suspense (in the traditional sense of the word) in Krakauer's Into the Wild, as anyone who reads the synopsis or picks up the book instantly learns that it is the story of a young man, Chris McCandless, who ventures into the Alaskan Wilderness and who never gets out. Chris' body is found in an abandoned bus used by moose hunters as a makeshift lodge, and Krakauer skillfully attempts to retrace his steps in an effort both to understand what went wrong, and to figure out what made McCandless give away his money, his car, and head off into Denali National Forest in the first place.

His book was one of the most haunting, unforgettable reads in recent years for me. I was mezmerized by passages in the author's other best-selling masterpiece Into Thin Air, such as the passage involving stranded and doomed guide Rob Hall, near the Everest summit, talking to his pregnant wife via satellite phone to discuss names for their unborn child. However, I was unprepared for the depths of emotion felt in reading Into the Wild - it literally kept me up at nights, not just reading but thinking about the book in the dark.

Some reviewers criticized the book because they thought McCandless demonstrated a naive and unhealthy lack of respect for the Alaskan wilderness. This is no hike on the Appalachian Trail - Chris was literally dropped off by a trucker into the middle of nowhere, with no provision stores, guides, or means of assistance nearby at his disposal. He had a big bag of rice and a book about native plants, designed to tell him which plants and berries he could eat. "How could he have been so stupid?", they ask.

Well, I certainly didn't feel compelled to give away my belongings, pack some rice and a Tolstoy novel and walk into the woods after reading the book, but the author does a remarkable job of exploring McCandless the person, including passages derived from interviews with the many poeple whose lives he touched in his odyssey as he drove and then hitch-hiked cross country from his well-to-do suburban home. Some of the more touching parts of the book involved tearful reminisces by some of these old aquaintances when they learned he had perished.

Krakauer also throws in for good measure an illuminating passage about a similar death-defying climb that he foolishly attempted at about the same age as McCandless, with little training and preparation, providing insight into what makes a person attempt a dangerous climb or hike. He even tells several fascinating tales, all of them true, of other recreational hikers who were stranded in the wilderness.

By the end of the book, I thought I understood McCandless' character, and I thought Krakauer was probably right in putting his finger on exactly what caused his death. I was moved by his plight regardless of his possible foolishness in venturing into Denali, and the final scenes involving Chris' family were emotionally devastating. You need not be an outdoorsman to appreciate it, and in fact unlike Into Thin Air the book is completely accessible to those who know nothing about the subject. I think this book is destined to become a classic.

Click here to see more reviews for: Into the Wild (MTI)

A Thousand Days in Venice (Ballantine Reader's Circle)

by Marlena De Blasi
(based on 77 customer reviews)

A Thousand Days in Venice (Ballantine Reader's Circle) (Paperback)
Author: Marlena De Blasi
Publisher: Ballantine Books


Price: $11.20
You save: $2.80 (20%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
40 out of 45 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 6/2/04

More than a fairy tale; maybe it's also a parable

Details, the essence of domesticity, shine in this story. There are the travelogue-esque descriptions of Venice: Napoleon's observation about Piazza San Marco and viewing works of art sequestered in ancient churches. There's a discussion of making house, once in the Midwest in a little house I would love to see and again in the grotty chaos of a bachelor's digs. And throughout are delicious descriptions of food and drink and the ways and places to enjoy them.

Like youth, this book may be somewhat wasted on the young. The small ruminations, the reflections on how we find a place and make a place in life may seem over-wrought. Until the onset of my own middle-age, I felt the same way about such memoirs. Now, I greet writings like this with a mixture of recognition and enthusiasm: recognition of the silly ways we fumble along and enthusiasm for another's discovery that it is not too late to savour what is delicious about life. In that, I find a parable of encouragement.

Click here to see more reviews for: A Thousand Days in Venice (Ballantine Reader's Circle)

Into the Wild

by Jon Krakauer
(based on 1219 customer reviews)

Into the Wild (Paperback)
Edition: 1
Author: Jon Krakauer
Publisher: Anchor


Price: $11.16
You save: $2.79 (20%) off the list price!

click for more info


Most useful review as voted by customers:
318 out of 333 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 7/20/00

Brilliant and Unforgettable

There is little suspense (in the traditional sense of the word) in Krakauer's Into the Wild, as anyone who reads the synopsis or picks up the book instantly learns that it is the story of a young man, Chris McCandless, who ventures into the Alaskan Wilderness and who never gets out. Chris' body is found in an abandoned bus used by moose hunters as a makeshift lodge, and Krakauer skillfully attempts to retrace his steps in an effort both to understand what went wrong, and to figure out what made McCandless give away his money, his car, and head off into Denali National Forest in the first place.

His book was one of the most haunting, unforgettable reads in recent years for me. I was mezmerized by passages in the author's other best-selling masterpiece Into Thin Air, such as the passage involving stranded and doomed guide Rob Hall, near the Everest summit, talking to his pregnant wife via satellite phone to discuss names for their unborn child. However, I was unprepared for the depths of emotion felt in reading Into the Wild - it literally kept me up at nights, not just reading but thinking about the book in the dark.

Some reviewers criticized the book because they thought McCandless demonstrated a naive and unhealthy lack of respect for the Alaskan wilderness. This is no hike on the Appalachian Trail - Chris was literally dropped off by a trucker into the middle of nowhere, with no provision stores, guides, or means of assistance nearby at his disposal. He had a big bag of rice and a book about native plants, designed to tell him which plants and berries he could eat. "How could he have been so stupid?", they ask.

Well, I certainly didn't feel compelled to give away my belongings, pack some rice and a Tolstoy novel and walk into the woods after reading the book, but the author does a remarkable job of exploring McCandless the person, including passages derived from interviews with the many poeple whose lives he touched in his odyssey as he drove and then hitch-hiked cross country from his well-to-do suburban home. Some of the more touching parts of the book involved tearful reminisces by some of these old aquaintances when they learned he had perished.

Krakauer also throws in for good measure an illuminating passage about a similar death-defying climb that he foolishly attempted at about the same age as McCandless, with little training and preparation, providing insight into what makes a person attempt a dangerous climb or hike. He even tells several fascinating tales, all of them true, of other recreational hikers who were stranded in the wilderness.

By the end of the book, I thought I understood McCandless' character, and I thought Krakauer was probably right in putting his finger on exactly what caused his death. I was moved by his plight regardless of his possible foolishness in venturing into Denali, and the final scenes involving Chris' family were emotionally devastating. You need not be an outdoorsman to appreciate it, and in fact unlike Into Thin Air the book is completely accessible to those who know nothing about the subject. I think this book is destined to become a classic.

Click here to see more reviews for: Into the Wild

Eat, Pray, Love

One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia

by Elizabeth Gilbert
(based on 1730 customer reviews)

Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia (Hardcover)
Author: Elizabeth Gilbert
Publisher: Viking Adult


Price: $14.97
You save: $9.98 (40%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
279 out of 398 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 2/27/06

HER OWN SEARCH - HER OWN VOICE, BOTH IMPRESSIVE


Reading the subtitle of Elizabeth Gilbert's latest book, "One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia," one can only think well, she certainly knows where to look! Also, upon learning that this is her chosen way of recovering from a particularly acrimonious divorce and a trying-to-make-up-for-that-loss romance that didn't work, we might think how fortunate she is to able to seek solace in such intriguing places.

Whatever our opinion of her reasons for this journey it has been established that she's a super writer (The Last American Man), and she brings all of her wit, intellect and stylish pen to Eat Pray Love. More than that, she brought a great deal of courage to her chosen task of traveling the world alone at the age of 34. She felt she needed a dramatic change, and it may be that she has found it.

It's a pleasure to listen to this memoir/travelogue in her voice. Many will associate with her initial confession that she's not a very good traveler in that she suffers from various digestive interruptions. However, on the plus side she easily makes friends with anyone. As she puts it, "I can make friends with the dead." Or, if there isn't anyone around she claims that she could chat with a pile of Sheetrock. Whatever the case, she is a very lucky lady as her travel experiences prove.

No Viva Italia for Italy because of Messina, a port town in Sicily that she describes as "scary and suspicious." Perhaps that's one reason why she's lonely and depressed there. But things definitely take a turn for the better in India and Indonesia, although her meditation needs a little more work.

Did Gilbert find what she was searching for? Listeners may not be too sure but they'll certainly enjoy the trip!

- Gail Cooke


Click here to see more reviews for: Eat, Pray, Love

I'm a Stranger Here Myself

Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away

by Bill Bryson
(based on 228 customer reviews)

I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away (Paperback)
Author: Bill Bryson
Publisher: Broadway


Price: $10.17
You save: $4.78 (32%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
57 out of 59 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 7/21/00

BILL BRYSON AND HIS SATIRICAL HUMOUR AT ITS BEST

So what's this then? A collection of columns written by Bill Bryson for the British Night & Day magazine, assembled into a book? I was sceptical when I first picked it due to the unfamiliarity here; I thought he was a travel writer. But then I started reading through the first few pages and am delighted to report that they were so entertaining and accessible that I ended up finishing the book very satified.

This book is about America, about consumerism, hypocracy, politics, culture and everything else in between, such as motels and boring interstate highways and the condition of AT&T service these days. Why should all this be so interesting? Because Bill Bryson's voice shines throughout, dissecting normally more complex subjects into bite-sized articles which are eminently readable to the extent that it is at times impossible to stop. Of course, his trademark humour is present too. If you read this in public, there is the risk of embarrassment by your involuntary snorts of laughter.

However, 'I'm a Stranger here Myself' isn't perfect. Much of the book is predictable, and 85% of the time, Bill appears to be complaining. Someone as talented as Bill Bryson should know not to engage in such indulgence because the end result is that the reader occassionally feels frustrated over the ostensible monotony. You also can't help but feel that an assemblage of brief columns is not enough to make a book.

Although this book is not standard Bill Bryson fare, it still manages to excel. It really is exceptionally enlightening, to read what he has to say subsequent to spending 20 years in England. He compares the contrasts between the two nations and questioning so many aspects of life that Americans take for granted, such as driving from shop to shop when they are merely footsteps apart, or the blatant excesses of junk food. Each article (in my edition, Black Swan) covers only five pages so they are very easy to get into.

If you are an American, perhaps you will enjoy this book more than anyone else as you will undoubtedly find it compelling to look into the views of an outsider in the process of 'assimilation'.

'I'm a Strange here Myself' doesn't feel like a book, more like a colelction of columns binded together. If you are willing to accept this, it is an extremely rewarding, insightful and refreshingly diverting read. This is enough to gain a hearty recommendation.

Click here to see more reviews for: I'm a Stranger Here Myself

Solitude

Seeking Wisdom in Extremes
A Year Alone in the Patagonia Wilderness

by Robert Kull
(based on 4 customer reviews)

Solitude: Seeking Wisdom in Extremes: A Year Alone in the Patagonia Wilderness (Hardcover)
Author: Robert Kull
Publisher: New World Library


Price: $16.29
You save: $7.66 (32%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
11 out of 11 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 8/28/08

Ask yourself just one question: "Could I do what he did?" Then read this book . . .

"Solitude" is a truly inspiring story, a real-life account of a man who spent a year in complete solitude on a remote wilderness island in South America. His initial aim was to "find spiritual enlightenment" and to come back with answers he could share with others through books, lectures, and film. His book is a series of captivating journal entries, mixed with contemplative interludes, about his day to day struggles dealing with the often intense and wild weather, finding food, building shelter, his complicated relation with his only companion, a cat, and coming to terms with his inner demons -- without any of the usual social "crutches" available to distract him. Although he doesn't make a big deal of it, he achieved all of this with one leg!

As soon as I got into the rhythm of his story, I did not want to leave it. I put everything else on hold, so as not to break the spell of reliving the tornado of pain, grief, peace, joy, and insight that flows from the pages of this gripping, evocative, and inspiring book. His writing is captivating because it is so honest, so authentic, so real, so human. Rarely, if ever, have I read such raw honesty. It takes real courage to express -- and even to read -- the full play of light and shadow in the human soul.

He went into solitude for a year, to an isolated island off southern Chile, in search of answers (or The Answer). He was intent on finding a way to spiritual enlightenment, to discover deep insights that he could take back to the world, answers he could share that would make the business of living life a little easier for others. But this is not what happened. He did not find The Answer, except to realize over and over and over again that there are no answers.

However, this is no "empty message" -- we learn, instead, that the emptiness of "no-answer" is the fullest answer of all. The integrity and spirit that shine from his writing will inform and inspire the rest of us who aim for spiritual enlightenment in the comfort of our homes, surrounded by friends and family. You don't have to abandon everything, pack up supplies, and head out into the wilds to discover the heights and the depths of the human spirit. Dr. Kull has done that for us. And he has returned to tell us that enlightenment is not an achievable end-state; rather, it is an ongoing process of opening to and accepting whatever shows up-inside and outside. Most of all, when you read "Solitude" you will realize, as Bob Kull has, that experiencing the richness of "ordinary" life is the most extraordinary achievement of all.

Like the bestselling book and Oscar-nominated movie "Into the Wild," Bob Kull's story brings us face to face with a "search for wisdom in extremes." The main difference, though, is that Kull lived to tell the tale. And we should be grateful for that. If you want to know what it truly means to be human, I encourage you to read this remarkable book.



Click here to see more reviews for: Solitude

In Search of Captain Zero

A Surfer's Road Trip Beyond the End of the Road

by Allan Weisbecker
(based on 64 customer reviews)

In Search of Captain Zero: A Surfer's Road Trip Beyond the End of the Road (Paperback)
Author: Allan Weisbecker
Publisher: Tarcher


Price: $10.17
You save: $4.78 (32%) off the list price!

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Most useful review as voted by customers:
19 out of 21 people found the following review helpful.

Review Date: 7/4/04

More than the sum of its parts

First let me say that I have never surfed, and other than watching Point Break, am ignorant of surfing culture. Likewise, I have never journeyed south of the border, and I certainly never was an international drug smuggler (though I have been known to inhale). That said, Mr. Weisbecker's writing put me right there, and made me feel that I was participating in these adventures. He vividly and viscerally described surfing to the point that I felt the rush, and almost tasted salt water. His recreation of a sense of place when describing Mexico and Central America reminded me of Mark Twain's best travel writing. And his recollections of his outrageous adventures in his youthful bandito smuggling days made me cry from laughing.(Even if these tales are exaggerated, as well they may be, only someone who knows what he is talking about could exaggerate so effectively.)
Beyond all the surfing, adventuring on the edge, and bandito hilarity, this book has a strong undercurrent of melancholy, a deep sadness that adds depth and realism to this rollicking adventure. Someone has complained that this book is just about a self-indulgent mid-life crisis. The author himself has admitted as much in his book. Yet the emotions and circumstances that bring a man to what we have chosen to call "mid-life crisis" are real, and nearly universal. Weibecker's genius is in the brutal honesty in which he communicates his own ambiguous emotional turmoil. Past a certain age, we all must find a way to live with the choices that we have made, and the bridges that we have burned, and that, at its core, is the heart of this book.
In Search of Captain Zero is engrossing, invigorating, hilarious, and sad. It is a swift read, and I was sorry when it was over. All in all, it is more than the sum of its parts, and I highly recommend it.

Theo Logos

Click here to see more reviews for: In Search of Captain Zero

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