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Neglected Travel Classics   |   READING AND TRAVEL GUIDE

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Highly Recommended

The Towers of Trebizond  •  Rose MacAulay  •  Jan Morris
LITERATURE •  2004 •  PAPER  • 277 PAGES • COMING IN OCTOBER
First published in 1956, this is the impossibly witty account of an eccentric party of Brits who set off for Turkey to establish a mission. Known for her sparkling humor, Macaulay has written a minor masterpiece that makes great fun of the church and eccentric Englishmen in exotic lands. It also includes much information on the region and its ancient history. (TKY15, $16.00)
  The Towers of Trebizond
Libby  •  Libby Beaman  •  Betty John
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  1998 •  PAPER  • 206 PAGES • HARD TO FIND ELSEWHERE
Peppered with period drawings and photographs, Libby Beaman's plainly told, wonderfully evocative account of a year-long sojourn with her husband on St. Paul, a Longitude favorite, captures the drama of pioneer life in Alaska's Pribilof Islands. (ARC07, $16.95)
  Libby
Dersu the Trapper  •  V.K. Arseniev  •  Malcolm Burr
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  1996 •  PAPER  • 358 PAGES • FAVORITE
A mesmerizing account of adventure, exploration and friendship in the Russian Far East. A Russian captain who explored much of the region north of Vladivostok at the turn of the 20th century, Arseniev forged a friendship with the taciturn Dersu, a nomadic Goldi hunter. The book was the source for Kurosowa's magnificent 1976 film, Dersu Uzala. (SIB24, $16.00)
  Dersu the Trapper
Ecuador, A Travel Journal  •  Henri Michaux  •  Robin Magowan
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2001 •  PAPER  • 144 PAGES • FAVORITE
A brief, querulous and entirely wonderful account of travels in Ecuador with the poet Gangotena, strong on color and personality and thin on travel practicalities. First published in 1929, the unlikely modernist Belgian-French painter and poet in Quito includes an unbeatable description of the accursed weather among his many impressions. The translator, who also provides an introduction, called "Ecuador" the first modern travel book and its sketches, prose poems, diary fragments and ruminations are certainly closer to the surrealists than the Victorians. (EDR16, $17.95)
  Ecuador, A Travel Journal
The Steel Bonnets  •  George MacDonald Fraser
HISTORY •  2008 •  PAPER  • 416 PAGES
A masterful history of the 16th-century borderland between England and Scotland, capturing all the celebrated mayhem, blood and glory of the time in rich detail. It is the definitive history of the period, deftly written and well researched, by the prolific screenwriter of the "Three Musketeers" and author of the "Flashman" series. (SCT04, $14.95)
  The Steel Bonnets
Tent Life in Siberia  •  George Kennan  •  Larry McMurtry
EXPLORATION •  2011 •  PAPER  • 425 PAGES
Kennan's spirited account of the people, cultures and harsh terrain of Kamchatka and the Russian Far East, originally published in 1871, is also a suspenseful tale of a doomed attempt to link Asia and America by telegraph through Siberia. (RUS142, $17.95)
  Tent Life in Siberia
Mornings in Mexico  •  D.H. Lawrence
TRAVEL NARRATIVE •  2009 •  PAPER  • 96 PAGES
Lawrence's magnificent collection of luminous short essays on the allure of Mexico and the American Southwest, originally published in 1927. The first first four essays explore Oaxaca, where Lawrence and Frieda rented a house, and the second four, Taos, where they lived in 1924. (MEX166, $16.00)
  Mornings in Mexico
Independent People, An Epic  •  Halldor Laxness
LITERATURE •  1997 •  PAPER  • 480 PAGES • FAVORITE
A masterwork redolent of rural Icelandic life in the early days of the 20th century. This great mock-epic features Bjartur of Summerhouses -- a hard-headed, independent-minded sheep farmer whose voice dominates the story. Whatever its ethnographic interest, this is a tremendously good book, rich in local detail. The author won the Nobel Prize in 1955. (ICL01, $16.95)
  Independent People, An Epic
The Egg and I  •  Betty MacDonald
BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR •  2008 •  PAPER  • 287 PAGES
A classic account of raising chickens and children in the 1940s on a dilapidated 40-acre farm on the rainy, remote Olympic Peninsula. (PNW51, $13.99)
  The Egg and I
Winter Wheat  •  Mildred Walker
LITERATURE •  1992 •  PAPER  • 386 PAGES
A classic novel of family life and love on a 1940s-era Montana farm by Mildred Walker. The University of Nebraska press has returned Walker's many much-loved books to print, most originally published in the 1950s and 1960s. Winter Wheat, Walker's best known tale, is memorably set against the backdrop of the landscape, vagaries of weather and routines of life on a farm in central Montana. It's the story of 18-year-old Ellen Webb, her family, friends, and loves. (RKY75, $15.95)
  Winter Wheat
Farthest North  •  Fridtjof Nansen
EXPLORATION •  2008 •  PAPER  • 678 PAGES
The great Norwegian explorer Fridjof Nansen recounts his adventures in the Arctic in this classic memoir, originally published in 1897. He describes the design and building of his ingenious ship, the "Fram" (which is still on display in Oslo), his drift across the icy wasteland, his six-month-long sledge journey with Johansen (where they reached farthest north before turning back), and his final dash across the ice floes to Franz Joseph Land, where they overwintered before being picked up by a passing British expedition. It's quite a tale, illustrated with maps and photographs. (ARC60, $17.95)
  Farthest North



Also Recommended

Galapagos Affair  •  John Treherne   • HISTORY  •  Colorful early settlers including Dr. Ritter, Baroness Wagner von Bosquet and her three lovers and sturdy Margaret Wittmer enliven John Trehorne's riveting, real-life tale of murder in paradise. (GPS69, $29.95)
 
 
The Raven Crown  •  Michael Aris   • HISTORY  •  Aris chronicles the rise of the Wangchuk dynasty in this beautifully illustrated history of the kingdom and its 20th-century monarchy, featuring 106 rare photographs. (BHU02, $60.00)
 
 
Letters on Cezanne  •  Rainer Maria Rilke  •  Joel Agee   • ART & ARCHITECTURE • FAVORITE  •  This brilliant meditation on Paris, art, and life takes the form of a series of short letters by the great poet Rilke to his wife Clara. The book chronicles Rilke's daily pilgrimage to a Cezanne exhibition at a Paris gallery. (FRN300, $14.00)
 
 
The Naturalist on the River Amazons  •  Henry Walter Bates   • EXPLORATION  •  A spell-binding early account of the river and its environs, first published in 1863. This classic chronicle of Bates's scientific adventures, part natural history and part travelogue, has inspired generations of tropical biologists. (AMZ07, $17.95)
 
 
Weird and Tragic Shores: The Story of Charles Francis Hall, Explorer  •  Chauncey Loomis  •  Andrea Barrett   • EXPLORATION  •  The tale of 19th-century Arctic explorer Charles Francis Hall, and the mysterious circumstances surrounding his untimely death somewhere in Greenland. (ARC63, $19.00)
 
 
A Fortune-Teller Told Me, Earthbound Travels in the Far East  •  Tizanio Terzani   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  A peripatetic journalist sets off to Laos, Cambodia, Burma, Thailand, Mongolia, China, Japan and other far-flung destinations in this warm, anecdotal account. (SEA35, $16.00)
 
 
A Time of Gifts  •  Patrick Leigh Fermor   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE • BEST SELLER  •  Fermor effortlessly interweaves anecdote, history and culture in this exuberant account of a walk from Holland, up the Rhine and down the Danube, through Germany, Prague and Austria in 1933. Written not in the moment, but 40 years later, the accumulation of time and experience give the book particular poignancy. (CEU30, $16.95)
 
 
A Visit to Don Otavio, A Traveller's Tale from Mexico  •  Sybille Bedford  •  Bruce Chatwin   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  A tale of a leisurely journey to Mexico after World War II, the first book by the marvelous Sybille Bedford. Chatwin called it "the most perfect travel book of the 20th century." (MEX126, $16.00)
 
 
A Winter in Arabia, A Journey Through Yemen  •  Freya Stark   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  A classic account of Stark's 1937-8 expedition in what is now Yemen, rich in incident. (ARB58, $17.00)
 
 
Between the Woods and the Water  •  Patrick Leigh Fermor   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Fermor continues with youthful adventures in Hungary and Romania, culminating with his arrival at the Iron Gates on the Danube. (CEU31, $15.95)
 
 
Beyond the Chestnut Trees  •  Maria Bauer   • BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR  •  Bauer interweaves recollections of her youth in Prague with an account of a return visit 40 years later in this affectionate, classic memoir. (CZH53, $24.95)
 
 
Farewell to Salonica  •  Leon Sciaky   • BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR • FAVORITE  •  In this affectionate memoir, and portrait of a city now changed forever, Sciaky looks back the thriving, polyglot Salonica of his youth. (GRE236, $14.95)
 
 
Hindoo Holiday  •  J.R. Ackerley   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Ackerley traipses across India as the English tutor to a handsome and extravagantly homosexual maharajah in this comic, beautifully written novel masquerading as a travelogue. (IDA115, $17.95)
 
 
Letters from Iceland  •  W.H. Auden   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Written with fellow poet Louis MacNiece, this quirky, under-appreciated masterpiece captures the spirit of Iceland, its people and landscapes. (ICL49, $24.95)
 
 
Lords of the Atlas  •  Gavin Maxwell   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE • HARD TO FIND ELSEWHERE  •  Set in the medieval city of Marrakech and the majestic kasbahs of the High Atlas mountains, this rousing history vividly portrays life in French colonial Morocco. Maxwell (Ring of Bright Water) follows the fate of the despotic Glaoui clan from 1893 to independence. (MRC35, $33.95)
 
 
Mani, Travels in Southern Peloponnese  •  Patrick Leigh Fermor   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Fermor weaves anecdote, magnificent description, classical references, history and commentary into an absorbing portrait of place. (GRE27, $15.95)
 
 
Memoirs of an Arabian Princess from Zanzibar  •  Emily Ruete   • BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR  •  Born Princess Salme in the Sultan's court on Zanzibar, the author wrote this book in the 1800s as a tribute to the island for her children. It is rich in details of a long-lost way of life, recalling the time when the sultans reigned on Zanzibar. (EAF44, $9.95)
 
 
Old Calabria  •  Norman Douglas   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  A classic account of adventures in southernmost Italy, first published in 1915. (ITL475, $20.00)
 
 
Peking Story  •  David Kidd   • BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR  •  A wry tribute to a lost way of life and time in Beijing. Kidd writes with humor and sweet nostalgia of the privileged and eccentric Lu family in the years around the 1948 Communist Revolution. (CHN264, $15.95)
 
 
Roumeli, Travels in Northern Greece  •  Patrick Leigh Fermor   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Extending his travels to the north, Fermor visits with the Sarakatsans and Kravarites, two remote peoples (ethnography was among his many interests), and chases off to Missolonghi to retrieve a pair of Lord Byron's shoes. (GRE249, $15.95)
 
 
The Innocent Anthropologist, Notes from a Mud Hut  •  Nigel Barley   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  British anthropologist Barley's refreshingly candid, witty account of the perils of fieldwork among the Dowayo of northern Cameroon. (CAF14, $17.95)
 
 
The Long Walk, The True Story of a Trek to Freedom  •  Slavomir Rawicz   • BIOGRAPHY/MEMOIR  •  Thisremarkable tale follows the odyssey of cavalry officer Rawicz and six fellow prisoners from their capture in Moscow under Stalin to a prison camp in Yakutsk and escape across Siberia and the Gobi to Tibet and over the Himalayas to India. Originally published in 1956. (SIB13, $16.95)
 
 
The Oysters of Locmariaquer  •  Eleanor Clark   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Winner of the 1965 National Book Award, this paper edition of Clark's pleasurable portrait of the hardy oystermen and byways of coastal Brittany is introduced by Mark Kurlansky. (FRN152, $13.99)
 
 
The Venetian Empire, A Sea Voyage  •  Jan Morris   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Morris reconstructs the whole of the glittering dominion of the Venetian Republic in this evocative account of a journey by sea along historic trade routes to the Adriatic and beyond. (ITL70, $24.95)
 
 
The Way of the World  •  Nicolas Bouvier  •  Patrick Leigh Fermor   • TRAVEL NARRATIVE  •  Subtitled Two Men in a Car from Geneva to the Khyber Pass, Bouvier's classic account of hard travel in a battered Fiat across Asia with artist friend Thierry Vernet in the 1950s is a cult classic. (TVL137, $16.95)
 
 
Love in a Fallen City  •  Eileen Chang  •  Karen S. Kingsbury   • LITERATURE  •  A major 20th-century Chinese writer, little known in the U.S. (these sparkling translations will go far to change that), Chang wrote these four fascinating novellas and two glittering stories in Japanese-occupied Shanghai in the 1940s. Her work is a revelation, poised tellingly between Confucian tradition and Western modernity. (CHN387, $14.95)
 
 
Memed, My Hawk  •  Yasar Kemal   • LITERATURE  •  From Turkey's master storyteller comes this deceptively simple tale of a rebellious boy in the Taurus mountains of rural Turkey. (TKY57, $15.95)
 
 
Pedro Paramo  •  Margaret Sayers Peden  •  Juan Rulfo   • LITERATURE  •  This poetic novel is an early, great example of magic realism set in Rulfo's native Jalisco. In a complicated series of flashbacks, the prodigal son returns to his birthplace, now an abandoned village haunted by ghosts. Originally published in Mexico in 1955. (MEX09, $14.00)
 
 
Sleepless Nights  •  Elizabeth Hardwick   • LITERATURE  •  Harwick's luminous 1979 novel of longing, desolation, New York City and Billie Holiday, thankfully returned to print. Read it for the extraordinary language, the flavor of 1940s New York. (NYC21, $14.00)
 
 
The Discovery of Slowness  •  Sten Nadolny  •  Ralph Freedman   • LITERATURE  •  A late 20th century fictional biography of the 19th century polar explorer Sir John Franklin (1786-1847), a man who makes history by discovering the power of his own slowness. (ARC59, $16.95)
 
 
The Radetzky March  •  Joseph Roth  •  Joachim Neugroschel   • LITERATURE  •  Magnificently set against the backdrop of the twilight of the Habsburg empire, Roth's family saga takes in the sweep of history and empire in Central Europe. The richly textured novel opens at the battle of Solferino, when young Lieutenant Trotta saves the life of the Emperor. (AST17, $16.95)
 
 
The Siege of Krishnapur  •  J.G. Farrell   • LITERATURE  •  Farrell evokes the folly and hubris of empire in this splendidly detailed tale, which takes place during the bloody revolt of 1857 that set Indian military recruits against the Raj. (IDA240, $15.95)
 
 
The Singapore Grip  •  JG Farrell   • LITERATURE  •  One of a trio of remarkable historical novels by J.G. Farrell, its centerpiece is the Japanese invasion of British-ruled Singapore. Ranging all over the colony from the slums to posh clubs and cricket fields, it's an evocative portrait of the colonial city in peace and war. (SGP13, $17.95)
 
 
The Skeptical Romancer, Selected Travel Writing  •  W. Somerset Maugham   • ANTHOLOGY  •  Pico Iyer introduces this Everyman's edition of Somerset Maugham's razor-sharp travel writing, set in Spain, China, Burma and Southeast Asia, including a long excerpt from Gentleman in the Parlour, a vivid account of travels from Rangoon to Haiphong by canoe, riverboat, rickshaw and pony. Also included is The Land of the Blessed Verigin (Spain), On a Chinese Screen and The Partial View (diverse places). (TVL484, $15.00)
 
 
Troubles  •  J.G. Farrell   • LITERATURE  •  Set on the eve of the Irish Rebellion, this first novel in Farrell's remarkable Empire Trilogy illuminates the British Empire's decline in Ireland and the Anglo-Irish to hilarious, haunting effect. (IRE171, $16.95)
 
 
Varieties of Exile  •  Mavis Gallant  •  Russell Banks   • LITERATURE  •  Wonderful stories set mostly in Gallant's native Montreal, a city starkly divided between working-class French Catholics and genteel English Protestants. (CND267, $14.95)
 
 
 
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