Planeta’s Interview with Tim Leffel

On a few occasions in the past, we’ve mentioned the work of travel writer Tim Leffel. Leffel’s Web site Perceptive Travel is a must-read for us here at gadling and, come to think of it, I realize we ought to link there more often. But anyway, he is also well known for his budget-minded books like The World’s Cheapest Destinations and, more recently, Make Your Travel Dollars Worth a Fortune. In this interview over at travel-activist site Planeta, Leffel holds forth on the travel writing thing, traveling on a budget in general, and on “contrarian travel” a nice term that means travel outside of the mainstream. That is certainly an appealing topic, anyway, to a majority of gadling readers.

It’s an informative look at the world of budget travel and offers some insight into how one can best use the Web to come up with creative and cheap trip ideas.

Best Travel Writing Anthologies

I am a big fan of travel writing anthologies. The nice thing about them is that you can sit down for a brief period, say a subway ride, and consume a story about someone’s adventure abroad and for just that brief period, be transported to someplace far away. The other thing about these anthologies is that the stories tend to be crisp and extremely well-written, largely because they have been selected by expert editors who have culled through mountains of stories to bring you the select few they deem worthy of publication in a book. I’ve recently taken a look art two wonderful anthologies that I highly recommend.

The first is The Best American Travel Writing 2006 edited by Tim Cahill. I brought this along with me on my Baja trip and consumed each story with relish (and a dollop of salsa…ha!). Seriously, the stories here are wonderful and they just keep coming. From Michael Behar’s thoughtful and at times harrowing piece on finding lost tribes in the rain forests of West Papua to a splendid piece on the quirky founders of Lonely Planet, this series never fails to both entertain and inspire. If you’re like me, you will find yourself constantly taking notes on new places you want to visit, let alone scribbling marginalia to remind yourself about wickedly clver turns of phrase to help your own writing. Take, for example, George Saunders hilarious journey through Dubai, where he encounters perhaps the most bizarre examples of conspicuous consumption on the planet: a series of lavish, luxury-laden hotels that belong in an F. Scott Fitzgerald short story about impossible human comforts. There is hardly a single story in this book that will not leave you either smiling or checking prices on kayak.com for flights to, say, St. Petersburg (see Gary Shteyngart’s piece on that subject).

Another fine collection comes from the good folks at Travelers’ Tales who every year compile their take on the year’s best travel writing for their Best Travel Writing 2006 anthology. I’ve read this anthology a few years running now and always find the picks both mind and soul-nourishing. They can also be quite funny. One of the great things about the editors’ choices here (the book is put together by TT’s Larry Habegger, James O’Reilly and Sean O’Reilly) is the passionate focus on story.

It may seem obvious that a “story” be the key feature of a travel tale, but the fact is, many writers tend to forget that what keeps us interested and eager to keep reading, is the desire to know what is going to happen next? TT’s Best Travel Writing is filled with tales that make you want to turn the page to find out what happens next.

Take, for example, Patrick Symmes’ “The Book”, a story that ran in Outside about a legendary travel guide compiled by vagabond Israelis that became a kind of Talmud of Travel. Having traveled myself in Latin America, I heard of this book, but more or less pooh-poohed the possibility that it actually existed. Turns out I was wrong.

Another wonderful story is Joel Simon’s “Fiji Time,” which opens with the joyful Fijian word of welcome “Bula!”, but then ends with a guy nearly getting his leg bitten off by a shark. These are just two of many, many fine stories that I could spend an entire day writing about here.

One of the great things about TT’s anthology is that the choices here are truly eclectic, and come from people and publications that are far from mainstream magazines. The America’s beset series ha a few of these, but TT does a better job, I think, of finding stuff that you’ve probably never seen.

So if you’re a traveler and are still hunting around for some good reading for yourself or perhaps a gift for a wanderlusting friend, consider one or both of these excellent books.

Bend to Baja

We’ve tried to give props to the good folks at Stellar Magazine when at all possible because we love the stuff they do. The online travel/adventure/sports magazine is a killer way to tune out from a day’s toil and immerse yourself, albeit virtually, in the outdoors.

But Stellar does more than publish great Web content, they have also done some epic publishing projects like The Powder Road, a book and accompanying multimedia Web site that rocks hard.

Now comes a new addition to the Stellar oeuvre ,a book about surfing the Pacific Coast called Bend to Baja .As the title suggests, a group of intrepid surfers, some well-known, makes a wave-based journey from Oregon to Baja, California (MUCH more on Baja coming shortly, as I literally returned last night from a week of paddling there). The Web site here has a lot of info about the book and the surfers who participated as well as a few nice excerpts for your printing/reading enjoyment. So take a minute kick back and take a look at this new book. And if you’ve got a surfer friend, maybe think of Bend to Baja as a nice Christma….um, Holiday, gift.

Which Guidebook?

We’ve posed this question before. You are on your way to some exotic location, what guidebook do you bring with you?

The right guidebook can make all the difference in your travels. It’s well worth spending a little extra time to make sure you bring the one that is appropriate to your style of travel and budget. But how do you decide which is the right one to bring?

Thankfully, the fine folks at Budget Travel offer a few pointers in picking the proper guidebook. Writer Zora O’Neill walks us through what to look for in a brand name, edition number, copyright, scope of work, maps, and index. One recommendation she suggests that I’ve never really paid attention to is the author’s bio. Make sure he/she has a long history with the region being covered and is an expert about it.

Sounds like some good advice to me, although, I think I’ll still probably stick to my favorite standby: Lonely Planet. But now I’m going to be a bit more discerning, however, before blindly purchasing my next one.

Micronations

A ways back I got my hands on a nifty little book called Micronations and left it on my shelf for a rainy day. The book was published by the good folks at Lonely Planet who, in case you haven’t noticed, have taken their Aussie-based publishing empire way beyond the realm of travel guides. Anyway, it rained last night. Hard. So I plucked Micronations off the shelf and decided to thumb through it. I wasn’t quite sure what it was about, but as I got through it i realized what a clever concept it was.

You know how a man is the king of his domain? Well, that may be an outdated, if not chauvinist cliche, but in a way it’s accurate here. Micronations is all about people who have decided to shun the burdens (tax and otherwise) of their home countries and went out to start their own…country, that is. Sure most of them here are jokes, but some of them, like the nation of Sealand, an island/platform/nation off the coast of Great Britain.

In case you want to know more about what a Micronation is, you can always check Wikipedia.