BootsnAll Travel Network



Reading List

The trip planning is still progressing, but the things we’re doing right now aren’t really interesting enough to blog about.  I’ve renewed my driver’s license so it won’t expire while I’m gone. We got our International Driver’s licenses too. Eric has been doing a lot of “fixing” and painting to get the house ready to rent. We started to pack up things we don’t think we’ll use in the next two months, and the garage is filling up with boxes.  Slowly the mundane things on the To Do list are being checked off.

All of this is exciting for us because it feels like we’re actively getting closer to the trip, but probably not for most of you reading this. Instead of boring you further with the minute details, I thought I’d take some time to mention a few interesting books that have helped in our RTW planning. I read these a few years ago when the “year off” first started to take shape, but just found them again while I was sorting through some boxes. I’ve re-read them both it’s amazing how much of the advice we’ve unconsciously followed in the interim. These two books are very different from each other, but they have one thing in common – oddly both have different photos of a lone backpacker trudging across desert sand dunes. Some editors must think that image conjures up exotic travel. I personally hope I don’t ever find myself in that situation.

First Time Around the World (Rough Guides) by Doug Lansky – “A trip planner for the Ultimate Journey” – This book is a great practical “how to” and includes everything from planning an itinerary to packing lists to advice on “foreign” toilets. I found a lot of the insights on public transportation/taxis, food, and health to be great for any type of traveling, including a simple week long vacation.

Vagabonding by Rolf Potts – “An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel” – While this book also has a lot of good travel information and references, it focuses more on the psychological, spiritual, and cultural aspects of travel. It covers a variety topics including why people want to travel, earning your travel, and even ethical issues. This one made me examine my own reasons for and fears against making this trip. There are quotations about travel in each chapter from Thoreau, Whitman, Muir and numerous other writers and texts that worth the price of the book alone.

Aside from the “advice” type books, I also want to give an honorable mention to another great inspiration, Bill Bryson. While some may put his books into a “humorous travel essay” category, I think they also offer a great insight into why people travel and certainly added a few destinations to our itinerary. A few of my favorites are A Walk in the Woods, In a Sunburned County, and Neither Here Nor There. I’ll leave you with a quote from that last one that sums up a huge part of the fun and lure of travel for me. It also explains the grand sense of euphoria and accomplishment I felt after simply purchasing a bus ticket in Chile (to the correct destination and back, I might add).

“Suddenly you are five years old again. You can’t read anything, you have only the most rudimentary understanding of how things work, you can’t even reliably cross a street without endangering your life. Your whole existence becomes a series of interesting guesses.” Bill Bryson – Neither Here Nor There.

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