Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Educating Alice: Adventures of a Curious Woman

Rate this book
This funny and tender book combines three of Alice Steinbach’s greatest learning, traveling, and writing. After chronicling her European journey of self-discovery in Without Reservations , this Pulitzer Prize—winning columnist for the Baltimore Sun quit her job and left home again. This time she roamed the world, taking lessons and courses in such things as French cooking in Paris, Border collie training in Scotland, traditional Japanese arts in Kyoto, and architecture and art in Havana. With warmth and wit, Steinbach guides us through the pleasures and perils of discovering how to be a student again. She also learns the true value of this second chance at educating the opportunity to connect with and learn from the people she meets along the way.

289 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2004

85 people are currently reading
3532 people want to read

About the author

Alice Steinbach

6 books151 followers
Alice Steinbach, whose work at the Baltimore Sun was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing in 1985, has been a freelance writer since 1999. She was appointed the 1998-1999 McGraw Professor of Writing at Princeton University and is currently a Woodrow Wilson Visiting Fellow. She lives in Baltimore, Maryland.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
603 (25%)
4 stars
764 (32%)
3 stars
698 (29%)
2 stars
216 (9%)
1 star
55 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 230 reviews
Profile Image for Angie.
138 reviews1 follower
December 22, 2009
I find myself having really mixed feelings about this book. On the bright side, Alice’s adventures REALLY made me want to travel! Her explorations to the French gardens were especially relaxing, and her visit to Japan and the study of geisha life was really interesting. And I absolutely LOVED the chapter on discovering Jane Austen’s life in England…I want to go on the tours she described!! The author also had some nice insight from time to time on the culture at hand or life as a whole. In addition, I admired her boldness and sense of adventure in traveling alone – and her connection with everyone she meets. (Although there were moments when this seemed too good to be true.)

HOWEVER…the author obviously lives a very privileged life, and she really never acknowledges this. I couldn’t help but feel green with envy at times at her life style. Also, it annoyed me that she has already been to many of the places several times, and is almost TOO cultured. For example, she might talk about how she been to such and such a place a hundred times, but THIS hotel is new to her. Or how she always stays on the ‘Left Bank’ in Paris – she’s never been much for the ‘Right Bank.’ Huh. In any case, much of wonderment of travel is lost because she is so familiar with everything, and in that way I found it hard to relate to her.

Some of the chapters and travels were definitely better than others, as were some of the tours. For some, she seemed to just transcribe what the tour guide said directly into the book. I found myself thinking that, sometimes, you just really need to be there. I also thought she could have left out her romance with Naohiro, or maybe developed it more. It just seemed out of place in this largely non-personal book.
Profile Image for Lynda.
2,497 reviews120 followers
June 29, 2009
I wanted to love this book. The description sounded perfect to me. I also share a love of travel and taking classes on anything that interests me. The difference is that I have trouble writing letters about my experiences, much less writing essays about these travels and learning experiences.

I did love the chapter on the French cooking school and her descriptions of the people she met and places she explored. Also, I was charmed by her study of Japanese culture. As a Jane Austen addict, I loved her tour of Jane Austen territory and her foray into the company of Austen scholarship. I admired her ability to connect with the Cuban people and their crumbling culture.

I was interested into her sidetrips into history in Prague and Florence, but her interuptions to discuss her personal history and her long distance romance with a Japanese professional was an unwelcome diversion.

But it was her investigation of the gardens of Provence and the training of Scottish sheep dogs bored me to tears.

While I was impressed by the people she met and I was admiring of her ability to connect with strangers who were willing to talk to her and even invite her into their homes. Asthe tales wore on I admit that I started to get suspicious of the universal acceptance and the willingness of total strangers to go out of there way to answer her questions and take her on tours.

Profile Image for Rebecca.
4,109 reviews3,393 followers
January 12, 2022
I’d loved her earlier travel book Without Reservations. Here she sets off on a journey of discovery and lifelong learning. I included the first essay, about enrolling in cooking lessons in Paris, in my foodie 20 Books of Summer 2020. In other chapters she takes dance lessons in Kyoto, appreciates art in Florence and Havana, walks in Jane Austen’s footsteps in Winchester and environs, studies garden design in Provence, takes a creative writing workshop in Prague, and trains Border collies in Scotland. It’s clear she loves meeting new people and chatting – great qualities in a journalist. By this time she had quit her job with the Baltimore Sun so was free to explore and make her life what she wanted. She thinks back to childhood memories of her Scottish grandmother, and imagines how she’d describe her adventures to her gentleman friend, Naohiro. She recreates everything in a way that makes this as fluent as any novel, such that I’d even dare recommend it to fiction-only readers.
Profile Image for Liz Wilson.
10 reviews1 follower
August 27, 2007
I have a thing about needing to finish ever book that I start...this book made it really really really difficult. I have nothing good to say about it. I found her narrative to be forced and her commentary totally weak. Don't ever read this book.
Profile Image for Tracey.
2,864 reviews76 followers
June 11, 2019
I haven’t awarded a 5 star read for quite a while , but this exquisite read deserves it. I truly liked Alice , and I especially enjoyed her time in Paris and Winchester with all the jane Austen stuff
Profile Image for JG (Introverted Reader).
1,191 reviews509 followers
November 24, 2015
Alice Steinbach makes the time to travel the world again, taking local classes that interest her and observing the cultures she finds. She studies cooking in Paris, Japanese culture/arts in Kyoto, several aspects of Florence, Jane Austen in England, Cuban culture in Havana, the gardens of the south of France, writing in Prague, and training Border Collies for sheepdog trials in Scotland.

I loved Without Reservations, Steinbach's first book. I admired her courage in packing up and traveling solo. I liked her thoughts and observations and felt that she is someone that I'd like to know and befriend in real life.

I didn't like Educating Alice quite as much. I felt that the author was trying a little too hard to recapture the magic of her first memoir and lost some of her charm. That sounds harsher than I mean it to, but that's the best I can do.

There's more introspection in this book, which can be good, but I honestly wanted more about the locations. I never got a good feel for some places, such as Prague and Kyoto.

But the places she got right were fabulous.

My husband is a second-generation Cuban-American so Havana naturally interests me. Ms. Steinbach was at her best in her descriptions of this city that time forgot. The old cars, the music, the dancing, the people--I'm ready to pack my bags. The only thing that I disagreed with was her description of the food! She was not a fan and seemed to take it for granted that the rest of the world acknowledges that Cuban food is uninspiring. What?!? Their dishes make my mouth water, they're so rich in flavor and homeyness.

There's a running theme of her letters to Naohiro and her thoughts on their long-distance relationship. Somehow, this all felt unnecessary. Part of the charm is that she's doing this alone. I did like knowing that they were still together and their relationship was growing but those kinds of books are easy to find. Her travels are what make this book special. Again, that sounds harsh and I don't mean it that way--I just feel the book would have been stronger had all of this been trimmed.

Fans of Without Reservations should go ahead and pick this one up; I think you'll enjoy it. I would recommend that new readers give her first memoir a try before reading this one.

Profile Image for Alice.
745 reviews23 followers
August 18, 2016
I'm not sure why I didn't love this book, it seems to include all the right things: international travel, learning new things, and someone named Alice ;-). But, I found the 'education' part of it kind of boring and superficial - she just dabbled in things that people do in retirement to keep from getting bored; and even then she didn't seem to actually complete much - doing only a couple of weeks of a longer cooking course in Paris, coming without a manuscript to a writing workshop in Prague. Her "learning" just wasn't motivated and prepared enough for me. But . . . the money she must have spent! The discussion of her fabulous hotels and how she felt a kinship with all the idle rich she met, blech. Despite outward appearances, it just wasn't my cup of tea.
Profile Image for Jenny (Reading Envy).
3,876 reviews3,678 followers
March 27, 2012
I am a huge fan of womens' travel writings, and this is one of the best yet.  Alice didn't just travel to places, she did things like enroll in a cooking school, learn how to train a border collie in Scotland, learn traditional Japanese dance... it was more of an educational travel tale. 
Profile Image for Stephanie Razey.
29 reviews
December 26, 2021
This was a great and light read. It feels like you are taking the classes with her and you learn a lot about different countries in a light and engaging way. As a young woman, I think it is targeted more towards an older woman, but I still enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Bridget.
1,158 reviews18 followers
April 15, 2009
Educating Alice : the Adventures of a Curious Woman, by Alice Steinbach.

I received this book from a friend who read it and thought I would enjoy it. I really did! Alice Steinbach worked for approximately twenty years as a reporter for a Baltimore newspaper, and as part of that job, traveled all over the world. Though she enjoyed the work, she found herself at a point in her life where she longed to be more on her own, not tied to a specific job, but still able to write. So she resigned/retired from her reporter’s job, and set out “to travel around the world as an informal student, taking lessons in such things as French cooking in Paris, Border Collie training in Scotland, traditional Japanese Arts in Kyoto, and the architecture and art of Havana.” She freely admits to venturing into these fields not to become a professional, but to “add little bits of knowledge here and there to what I was born not knowing.”

The best part of this book is the author’s voice, and her willingness to admit that she struggles – and sometime just completely does not comprehend – some of the things she has chosen to do. The writing is conversational, with the typical asides and segues that occur when friends are talking. I enjoyed her descriptions of places and people that she met along the way, as well as finding out about the topics she chose to study. If you enjoy reading about other people’s travels, I think you would enjoy this book quite a bit.
Profile Image for Jane.
259 reviews
June 22, 2018
A friend recommend this book to me after I told her that one of my main goals as a recent retiree was to find the beauty in things and become a more educated person. Even though it is not a great book, it fit into my ambitions, suggesting avenues that would not have immediately occurred to me. The author, Alice, has a simple, dry writing style as befits a newspaper journalist, and perhaps in recognition of this, she spices the book up with childhood memories and letters and conversations with the Japanese man with whom she is conducting a long distance romance. Some times when she enters this personalization mode, I want to tell her not to bother because it seems too forced. I didn't mind the romance, since the two do meet up on her trip, but the transcribed letters to him that she includes in the book seem to be a shortcut to writing about particular events in her travels, as if she is thinking, hmm, I've already written about this when I wrote to Naohiro, so why rewrite it for the book--plus, I'll earn points for personalizing.

Probably the most personally revealing of her educational activities is the writing workshops Alice takes in Prague. She doesn't like it. I wonder if as a professional writer she felt that her writing assignments for the class would receive critical acclaim from her fellow students. When the class didn't recognize her passion for the subject of her writing, Alice concludes that "workshopping" isn't for her. Even though she repeated to herself her teacher's guidance that the students who are having their work critiqued should pay attention to the contents of the critique, Alice turns off on the whole thing, missing the point that she was hearing advice not just from author-wannabes but from people who are a microcosm of her potential readership.

The snarky reader in me wonders what Alice's budget was for her trip, but in truth, I respect her a great deal for taking it and know that it's not money that's stopping me from doing something similar--it's the fact that I don't think I would enjoy traveling alone. So, more power to you, Alice. You are a work in progress just as we all are, and I appreciate your adventures as an inspiration for my own.
1,149 reviews
August 25, 2018
In “Without Reservations” Alice Steinbach took a leave of absence from her journalist job at the Baltimore Sun and traveled in Europe. When she tried to return to her old routine, she discovered that her curiosity was leading her back to more travel and a chance to learn new things. She takes a French cooking class in Paris, explores architecture and art in Havana, learns to train border collies to herd sheep in Scotland, studies Jane Austen in England, and takes a course in writing non-fiction in Prague. Along the way she meets fascinating people and keeps up her correspondance with her Japanese friend Mr. Naohiro whom she met in Paris in her earlier travels. Alice is comfortable with opening conversations with people she has just met, and she sounds like a person it would be fun to be with. I enjoyed this book very much.
Profile Image for Jeff Clausen.
419 reviews
October 23, 2022
New to me, this author has all the good stuff: curiosity, kindness, wit, and great style. Her stories of learning is really a sort of travel book, as she’s never home and has to find her way in strange neighborhoods while chatting with fellow adventurers, and strangers. I felt warm and fuzzy during much of her narration, probably due to her positive outlook and kind ways. Yet she’s also in the midst of a very long-distance romance at the time, which adds a level of drama to the adventures. Overall this is a wonderful work and I hope to find her other volumes.
Profile Image for Mary Forbes.
54 reviews
August 4, 2023
A great read for someone interested in traveling and personal growth. Thoroughly enjoyed Steinbach's writing style and personal anecdotes during the course of her adventures. I appreciated her imperfections as well as her education journey throughout the read.
Profile Image for Katrina.
210 reviews
August 12, 2017
I loved Without Reservations because it was based entirely on Alice's travels. This book, however, was more focused on the courses she took in various countries and little about the travel to reach them. Just not to my liking.
Profile Image for Marni.
1,158 reviews
April 14, 2020
Each short story dealt with travel to another country. Every one of them made me want to visit there and hope I could wander around the cities and towns like she did.
Profile Image for Carla Catalano.
261 reviews4 followers
July 31, 2016
Alice Steinbach (author of Without Reservations) certainly has a curious mind and the fever of wanderlust. It would be great if we could all be Alice and pick 6 or 8 destinations each with a variety and long list of things to learn and write about. Alice's greatest gift and honed skill is her curiosity and the ability to find people all over ready to satisfy her thirst for knowledge and answers. Alice begins her travels at the Ritz Escoffier Cooking School and ends the book on the Hill of Camstraddan (a Scottish Farm) to learn the rudiments of training Border Collies and to attend the dog trials held in the nearby village. Other excursions include Alice learning to dance in the Wakayagi style in Kyoto and understand about the fine art of becoming a Geisha and origami. The old Florentine church, Santa Maria Del Fiore, Exeter University and a course on Jane Austen, In-Depth knowledge about Cuban artists, street life, culture and history, Secret Gardens in France belonging to actors, celebs, designers and more including a Charles University seminar Czech Lit & Culture & writing workshop. We would all the love the opportunity to have a slice of Steinbach's life and the ability to choose what we love and want to learn more about. A luxurious, and indulgent read...
Profile Image for alysa.
103 reviews1 follower
October 5, 2011
This book was extremely hard to get through. It just didn't hold my interest, and I kept falling asleep. It is a series of stories about this woman's travels. Although some of the information she presented about the various locations was interesting, I felt the author was searching for a point and didn't make it. I felt that the time line jumped around too much. As she would talk about the various places she seemed to talk about the days of her visit unchronologically and that made it kind of hard to follow. I thought she was going to learn some profound lesson from each place and the reader would be able to take away something valuable. This just didn't happen. It really was just ramblings from some woman who thought her travel log would be interesting for others. The only part of the book that truly held my interest was when she wrote a little fiction about a young girl during WWII who lived in Prague. Other than that I was pretty disappointed in this book as I thought it would be so much more interesting.
84 reviews18 followers
August 25, 2010
This woman took a year off from her job at a newspaper to travel around the globe learning various things. It starts in France at a cooking school, and ends in Scotland learning to herd sheep with working border collies. Her tales are interesting most of the time, and her writing draws you in (one of my favorites is her dancing in a bar in Cuba) so you experience the places, people and cultures like you were travelling with her. This is one woman who dreamed of places and things she wanted to experience, and had the guts to make it happen. Some of the things she undertook were difficult (writing stories in a short time and then getting critiqued by your classmates), some simply enjoyable (visiting gardens in Provencal, France). This is a wonderful memoir that makes you ponder what advertures to undertake for yourself.
Profile Image for Melanie.
308 reviews4 followers
March 25, 2012
I quite enjoyed most of the individual chapters in this, especially the ones about adventures in England, France, and Scotland , but the book as a whole I found a bit lacking. I kept expecting for there to be a unifying theme or experience that just wasn't there - no Grand Plan laid out in the prologue for why these particular trips were chosen, no Great Philosophy of travel (other than hotels are good), no point for each trip other than to finish it and "learn" something, and far too little relation between traveling and the narrator's life to justify the jarring recollections of personal relationships a la Eat, Pray, Love that are peppered throughout. If I had realized all of this going in, I suspect I would have enjoyed it more rather than expecting it to be something it wasn't.
Profile Image for Deb (Readerbuzz) Nance.
6,364 reviews336 followers
March 16, 2016
I want to be Alice Steinbach. I want to travel around the world. I want to stop here and there and take classes in things that interest me. I want to go to Paris and take a cooking class. I want to go to Italy and study art. I want to visit England and learn more about Jane Austen. And then I want to come home and write a book---this one---about my adventures during this world tour.

No, my life is too busy right now for me to be Alice Steinbach and travel the world and take classes. Luckily, however, I had enough time to spend the weekend reading her book and vicariously traveling and learning with her.
Profile Image for Mary.
7 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2012
When I read the back of the book I was excited. Even when I describe the book to someone it sounds great. Actually reading the book, not so great. The adventures that Alice goes on sound so enjoyable and she gives very detailed descriptions, yet there's a disconnect I can't quite put my finger on. The best way of explaining it, that I can come up with, is it's just too perfect, too polished. I don't feel any passion or humanness even while she's describing her passion or her flaws or memories. I still, right now, want to like it, but in the end, (and beginning and middle) was disappointed.
Profile Image for Cindy.
1,045 reviews
June 22, 2015
This book continues the adventures of author Alice Steinbach. Her first book, Without Reservations, introduced her as a single traveler, open to new people and new experiences. In Educating Alice, she travels with specific learning experiences planned. These trips lacked the serendipity of the earlier book, but were just as enjoyable. Recommended if you like travel and gentle adventures.
Profile Image for Sonja.
424 reviews10 followers
October 26, 2015
I love travelogues and the fact the traveler is a single, independent, woman driven by her own curiosity makes this one outstanding. I especially loved her trip to see the gardens of southern France. Steinbach's writing is detailed and captures what she experiences in her knowledge quests and what she learns serendipitously.
Profile Image for Kathy.
424 reviews
Read
March 8, 2017
I won't be finishing this one. I do not find Alice to be interesting. Her inner Dillon's put me to sleep. Sorry Alice.
Profile Image for Catie.
1,552 reviews53 followers
Want to read
August 24, 2017
Recommendation from Caro - 8/24/2017
Profile Image for Ingrid.
94 reviews7 followers
May 17, 2020
This was my second book by Alice Steinbach, and I must say I preferred "Without reservations" better.

It took me a really long time to finish, primarily because of a small print that made reading not so comfortable, so I was reading it by a few pages at a time alongside other books.

I like the concept where the author travels the world and tries various courses in different countries, and it would be really interesting to know how Alice actually selected and decided what she wants to learn and where. Each story can be read as standalone, the one thing that they have in common is a letter to Naohiro. Those who have not read "Without reservation" may not understand who he is and why Alice is writing to him.

While I enjoyed some stories better than others, it was interesting to travel with Alice from Paris to Japan, from Cuba to Provence and so on, finishing the journey in Scotland. Having finished the book I understand why she left Scotland last, it was a tribute to her Scottish ancestors and in a way a "coming home", and that is how all travels ultimately end.

“Content. The world startled me. It seemed to fit exactly what I’d been feeling in the past several days but hadn’t put a name to. After all, I wasn’t used to being content. What I was used to was always looking ahead to the next thing. Or to be precise, to proving I could do the next thing. But my stay in Scotland has stirred feelings inside me that had nothing to do with planning for the next thing or proving myself. Whatever bits and pieces of my true self has unraveled over a lifetime as I tried to meet the expectations of others seemed to have knitted themselves back into place. I felt more confident than I had in many years.”

“I thought of all the things I’d been learning over the last year and a half, of how different the demands and rewards were as I went from one lesson to the next. Yet each of them – from cooking at the Ritz Escoffier School to studying the world of Jane Austin – seemed to have added a new layer of muscle to both mind and body.”
Profile Image for Jen.
774 reviews36 followers
August 1, 2022
Alice Steinbach was a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist for The Baltimore Sun when she quit to take care of her dying parent. After her mother passed and her marriage ended, she decided to very much make a new start of things and started traveling solo in the early Aughts.
In this, her second travel book, she travels with the theme of wanting to learn new things and very much puts on her journalist’s hat as she reports on cooking lessons in Paris, geisha lessons in Kyoto, gardening lessons in Provence, etcetera. Her passions for particular topics came through loud and clear, but it was just as obvious when something didn’t quite click for her.
As a world (and worldly) traveler, her privilege came through loud and clear which could make it a challenge to connect with her. Because of that, I think her editor asked her to “Gilbert it up!” and add more personal things like her letters to her long distance partner Naohiro. While the personal felt right in Eat, Pray, Love, I don’t think it meshed quite as well with Steinbach’s reportorial style.
In the summer of 2022, I’m rather jealous of everyone’s travels and looking for any excuse to armchair travel in my reading and viewing. Despite its faults, I found Educating Alice a welcome diversion and wish that Steinbach had lived longer so that I could have experienced more of her travel writing.
Profile Image for Linda C.
2,451 reviews2 followers
October 18, 2024
I read Steinbach's Without Reservations over 10 years ago and it is on my Keeper shelves as a favorite armchair travelers read. While reading this book I stopped at several points to look up information about the author and place her travels in context. I had trouble setting up a timeline. Each of the places she writes about here are set in a context of time of year and length of stay but not as a continuum or even a hint of whether they are in order or in connected travel. I have the feeling they are selected stays from a few years of travel unlike the one continuous time frame in the earlier book. Alice has a way of connecting with people and exploring an area without moments of anxiety that I find when I travel. I lack the assurance she has acquired in her years as a reporter and would find much of this intimidating. Thus the reason I am an armchair traveler.

The stays are all interesting in their way but not a journey of personal discovery as the first book was. This book will join the other on my shelves but not with the same affection.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 230 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.