Travel Literature Makes My Heart Beat Faster.. discussion
Anybody using Kindle to read travel lit?
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Am I glad I found a good locksmith!


John Dwyer, author of High Road To Tibet - Travels in China, Tibet, Nepal and India.


Thinking more, the benefit of the Reader doesn't really apply to travel writing for me. I don't tend to read travel when I'm on the road. I'm too involved in what's going on around me.

John Dwyer, author of High Road To Tibet - Travels in China, Tibet, Nepal and India.

Julia, both the Sony and the Kobo use Adobe's epub DRM so you should be able to get exactly the same set of books on each. One book store may have a better selection than the other, but you can use the books you buy at each on both devices if you have them both registered with the same Adobe account.

John Dwyer, author of High Road To Tibet - Travels in China, Tibet, Nepal and India.


If anybody's interested in reading about Brazil's Estrada Real, "Journey on the Estrada Real: Encounters in the Mountains of Brazil" is available in Kindle, Nook, and iBooks editions. Unlike the printed edition, it has photos. It's also a lot cheaper.

I was amazed at how easy it was to read the phone. I didn't expect to like it at all, and I'm absurdly opposed to using the phone for anything at all. (I can barely use the thing to make phone calls.) But I was desperate for something to read and elated when I found a hotspot in a city and it occurred to me that I could get myself a book in a matter of seconds. It was actually very easy to read on the phone -- easy to hold, easy to read.

This begs the question of whether one considers a book of reminiscences of "I was an expat in (this place)" to be "travel writing"? I do, for the most part, though it's not the same as "I went there, and here's what I saw and did."

On the 'I was an expat...' question. I AM an expat. I dare say the world will one day see something more from me than journalism/PR work. The expat, assuming he/she has intelligence can bury deep inside the psyche of the place/culture more than the traveler. Understand in depth the divisions or lack of them on religious/social/tribal lines. The traveler passes through and of course the dividing lines can be very blurred insofar as some of the best travel writers have very penetrating minds. Gertrude Bell, Richard Burton... traveler or expat?
Another blurred distinction!


Exactly! That is what makes Burton and Bell expats, though they are classed as travelers.
But not Gypsies!


I don't see why reading a travel narrative on a trip is much different than any other non-fiction?

To me an expat is someone who "has moved to another place, with that location as their permanent (or at least long term) residence" but still defines him- or herself in terms of the place he/she left. This is why I never call myself an expat. I'm an immigrant.
But I don't see how being either an expat or an immigrant disqualifies you from being a traveller.
On topic: I'm reading Black Lamb and Grey Falcon on my Kindle, which feels kind of weird :)


Churchill: Navigating bugs, belugas and polar bears
and
Jordan: A Different Middle East
$2.99 each



Books mentioned in this topic
Mediterranean Winter: The Pleasures of History and Landscape in Tunisia, Sicily, Dalmatia and the Peloponnese (other topics)The Great Railway Bazaar: By Train Through Asia (other topics)
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (other topics)
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (other topics)
Dragon Bones: Two Years Beneath the Skin of a Himalayan Kingdom (other topics)
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John