Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2017 Read Harder Challenge
>
Task #8: Read a travel memoir
date
newest »

message 101:
by
Teresa
(new)
Apr 20, 2017 11:06AM

reply
|
flag









10 Travel Memoirs by Novelists of Color
http://www.ishqinabackpack.com/10-tra..."
thank you!


I fail to understand the love for Bill Bryson. I find his writing dull and his commentary occasionally grating. Don't give up on travel memoirs though. There are so many good ones. Tony Bourdain's A Cook's Tour is fun. Steinbeck's Travels with Charley is really insightful and funny. Mark Salzman's Iron & Silk is a favorite of mine but I confess I was a travel bum in China at around the same time so it might be me. Che Guevara's Motorcycle Diaries has real political and historical import if you are a history or political buff. Into Thin Air changed my entire philosophy on adventure travel. There really are so many good options.

Thanks for the suggestions. Have read Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential so probably should add A Cook's Tour to my list.






From reading the description on goodreads I think Carsick would count although I've not read it myself. I hadn't heard of it before but love John Waters (although only seen his tamer films so far!) so I've added it to my 'to-read' list.


It's funny, because in doing stuff like the Read Harder challenge for a few years in a row now, and becoming more interested in reading about other places in general, I've definitely found that I have read more books set in faraway countries or set locally than books simply set further away in my own country.


First, travel memoirs are not really my jam.
Second, I wish the narrator had added some kind of flair or something - to make Che's sense of humor more apparent. I spent a lot of time thinking, "wait, what? oh yeah, that was kinda funny." Maybe that's just one of the things lost in translation.
And I think that is really the crux of why this book was only okay for me ... I just didn't get the culture/the time period. All the times that they dupe someone into buying them dinner/paying for lodging/transportation just kind of bugged me. (Sorry!) I totally get that this was supposed to be a wild-where-the-wind-takes-us adventure. Made me think of On the Road - which I hated (sorry, not sorry).



TIA.


I personally think it would be a bit of a stretch to call it a travel memoir--I agree with you that it's more true crime. Although it's a true story told in the first person, it's not really about the author, and while he does travel to Savannah, the focus is on the city itself, rather than the fact of him being a traveler.

I would agree with this. I would call it a biography of a city and definitely a true crime story.




I have other options but I'm going to be reading that one this month anyways.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Tomb in Seville (other topics)Endurance: A Year in Space, A Lifetime of Discovery (other topics)
Traveling with Ghosts: A Memoir (other topics)
Foreign Correspondence: A Pen Pal's Journey from Down Under to All Over (other topics)
The Great Railway Bazaar: By Train Through Asia (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Paul Theroux (other topics)Ernesto Che Guevara (other topics)
Rosie Whitehouse (other topics)
Will Ferguson (other topics)
Tim Moore (other topics)
More...