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The Travel Issue

  • Posted by: GOOD
  • on June 5, 2008 at 5:44 pm

Frozen drinks with little umbrellas have their place—usually involving a white-sand beach. But when inveterate wanderer Hans Christian Andersen wrote “To roam the roads of lands remote, to travel is to live,” he didn’t mean cruise ships and high-walled resorts. Vacations are nice, but they’re not the same thing as traveling: wandering through marketplaces, sampling food of indeterminate origin, and, most important, meeting new people. It’s an old-fashioned but effective way to remind us that we’re all in this together. Certainly, we would all be better off right now if a few people in the Pentagon had spent a little more time drinking tea with locals in Iraq.

This doesn’t require a transcontinental flight—a New Yorker could learn as much from a trip to Kansas as to India. All we require is a willingness to break out of the bubbles most of us live in, to be shocked and moved and a little bit scared. Don’t worry, you can grab that umbrella drink next time.

Travel Features from this issue:

Blacker-than-black Market
What can $500 get you in one of the world’s most notorious black markets? SACHA FEINMAN shops Paraguay’s Ciudad del Este to find out.

Beautiful Messes: A Travel Guide to Man-made Disasters
ERIC SMILLIE leads a tour of America’s five most spectacular environmental disaster sites.

Tony Wheeler on Nontraditional Travel Destinations
The Lonely Planet founder TONY WHEELER on why the places with government advisories are often the most interesting.

Wish You Were Here?
Dispatches from unlikely tourist destinations: Iraq, Venezuela, Pakistan, Kosovo, and Kenya.

Train in Vain
BEN JERVEY rides Amtrak coast to coast to figure out how U.S. train travel got derailed.

Guide to Guidebooks
ADAM LEITH GOLLNER on the best guides to stick in your fanny pack.

The Ethics of Travel Writing
ROGER NORUM makes sense of the Lonely Planet scandal.

Wanderlust
GOOD traces the most famous trips in history. An original interactive graphic.

  • Filed under: Magazine : The Travel Issue
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DISCUSSION: 3 Comments
    • Posted by: agrover
    • on June 10, 2008 at 4:30 pm

    short and sweet, a vivid and memorable introduction piece to all that encompasses traveling. thank you.

    • Posted by: newyorkdude
    • on July 3, 2008 at 11:17 am

    You mention Hans Christian Andersen. One of the main benefits of travel Andersen enjoyed was meeting and …..ing women. He was an inveterate womanizer. He had a falling out with his college buddy Soren Kierkegaard over his womanizing.

    Another major European author, Heinrich Heine, once wrote in his book Travels in the Hartz Mountains that the best line he could use with women he met while he traveled was “I’m here only one night and I will be gone tomorrow.” Yes, there are definite benefits to travel.

    • Posted by: Sinibaldi
    • on August 2, 2008 at 4:51 pm

    In this period,

    and in its true

    light, the sound

    of a picture forgets

    and emotion in

    the care of a faith;

    a candle reappears,

    a delicate silence

    remembers a river

    and then, at the

    first opportunity,

    I’ll love you my

    darling…..

    Francesco Sinibaldi

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