CHECK IT OUT
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When wanderlust hits, savvy travelers can book a flight, hit the road
or head for the high seas. Or, they can visit their nearest library for
virtual passage to venues around the globe.
“I don’t think I’m likely to encounter anything so extreme as the
snows of Antarctica or the dunes of Arabia along the American
interstates,” observes Larry McMurtry in “Roads.” What the author does
experience in traversing America’s great roads is a recollection of
things past, as he tries to find something “out there that the reader
will enjoy knowing about.”
In his third nonfiction work, McMurtry admits he’s “not attempting to
take the national pulse, or even my own pulse.” The latter endeavor comes
closer to what he accomplishes in an automotive odyssey aimed at
recouping some of the “lost feelings” and “elements of . . . personality
that are still unaccounted for” in the wake of his 1991 heart surgery.
Award-winning travel writer Mike Tidwell provides a more heightened
sense of adventure in the 20 tales that comprise “In the Mountains of
Heaven.” From getting a haircut in Hanoi to conversing with a homeless
fisherman in Washington D.C., Tidwell takes simple experiences and makes
them fascinating. Colorful prose and an ability to draw out those he
meets make his accounts of adventures on six continents especially
engaging.
Equally broad in scope and feeling is “Fresh Air Fiend,” Paul
Theroux’s collection of articles that jump from post-Mao China to turtle
watching in Hawaii and kayaking on Cape Cod. While they’re infused with
the prolific writer’s trademark grumpiness, the lively accounts reveal
much about his self-inflicted lifestyle of compulsive travel, writing and
alienation.
A more upbeat tone pervades “Honeymoon in Purdah,” Alison Wearing’s
report on five months spent in a country few Westerners have a chance to
see. Close-up portraits of the people she encountered and accounts of
Iran’s Islamic Revolution provide an illuminating study of a nation with
a long and exotic history.
For those who like their travel on tape, one of the world’s funniest
travel writers offers a glimpse of extreme spaces, primeval landscapes
and improbable creatures on “In a Sunburned Country.” Read by author Bill
Bryson, this 10 plus-hour travelogue is an adventure-filled tour of
Australia that extends far beyond beaten tourist paths.
When you’re ready to hit the road for real, hundreds of magazine
articles provide details about hotels, air fares and destinations. Find
them in such periodicals as Travel & Leisure, Travel Holiday, National
Geographic, Sunset and Outside, all available on Newport Beach Public
Library shelves. Or, visit o7 https://www.newportbeachlibrary.orgf7 to
find travel-related articles and journals that can be accessed online
from the ProQuest and EBSCO databases.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
Tamara Henn. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers by
accessing the catalog at o7 https://www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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