Almost Fearless: Monthly Travel Book Club discussion

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Kite Strings of the Southern Cross
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April 2013: Kite Strings of the Southern Cross
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"It scares me to look at...empty pages for months at a time in a diary. These are days lost. They were lived once. When I read about days I've written about, I remember things that make me smile, and although I can't go back, something of them lives again inside me. It's like opening up a magic that's always been there, but buried."
I can relate. Spoken like a true blogger. While I hope my little TravelnLass blog inspires and entertains, the bottom line is that it's mainly my own personal means of recapturing my many wondrous travel moments - like delicate blinking fireflies, that otherwise might well fade from my fickle memory.

I am struggling with my own travel memoir at the moment, wading through the melancholy of no longer being on the road. I'm hoping that going back to KITE STRINGS will be a comfort and a guide.

"It scares me to look at...empty pages for months at a time in a diary. These are days lost. They were lived once. When I read about days I've written abo..."
I hear ya! That paragraph really resonated with me too!


Seriously. I mean, you really gotta love a writer who can make a verb out of "rainbows", no?

Chapter 8: Malaysia. Two words: GEM Alert!
Indeed. Chapters 1 - 7 were delightful (if a bit tiresomely metaphorical), but oh my, in Malaysia (a flashback) Ms.Gough seems to truly come into her own. I suspect, likely b/c she was then truly solo, and not coincidentally mooning over some Fijian lad. ANYWAY, the entire chapter was much more spunky and down-to-earth, revealing, I believe Laurie's true nature (when not muddied by love-sickness). I'm tempted to quote the entire Malaysia chapter, but instead I shall pluck but one especially sterling gem:
Her reference to a night of bedbugs: "It wasn't the persistent barking of a dog all night long that kept me awake, nor was it the stagnating heat, lack of air, or lack of space in the bed. Something else kept me awake, something that made those things seem like quiet little daisies in a meadow."
Classic.
Oh my yes, I expect to very much enjoy finishing this one.

Do you think that Laurie would be happy living in Fiji on a long-term basis?
Thanks!