The Best American Travel Writing 2007
“Travel is not about finding something. It’s about getting lost — that is, it is about losing yourself in a place and a moment. The little things that tether you to what’s familiar are gone, and you become a conduit through which the sensation of the place is felt.” — from the introduction by Susan Orlean

The twenty pieces in this year’s collection showcase the best travel writing from 2006. George Saunders travels to India to witness firsthand a fifteen-year-old boy who has been meditating motionless under a tree for months without food or water, and who many followers believe is the reincarnation of the Buddha. Matthew Power reveals trickle-down economics at work in a Philippine garbage dump. Jason Anthony describes the challenges of everyday life in Vostok, the coldest place on earth, where temperatures dip as low as minus-129 degrees and where, in midsummer, minus-20 degrees is considered a heat wave.

David Halberstam, in one of his last published essays, recalls how an inauspicious Saigon restaurant changed the way he and other reporters in Vietnam saw the world. Ian Frazier analyzes why we get sick when traveling in out-of-the-way places. And Kevin Fedarko embarks on a drug-fueled journey in Djibouti, chewing psychotropic foliage in “the worst place on earth.”

Closer to home, Steve Friedman profiles a 410-pound man who set out to walk cross-country to lose weight and find happiness. Rick Bass chases the elusive concept of the West in America, and Jonathan Stern takes a hilarious Lonely Planet approach to his small Manhattan apartment.

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The Best American Travel Writing 2007
“Travel is not about finding something. It’s about getting lost — that is, it is about losing yourself in a place and a moment. The little things that tether you to what’s familiar are gone, and you become a conduit through which the sensation of the place is felt.” — from the introduction by Susan Orlean

The twenty pieces in this year’s collection showcase the best travel writing from 2006. George Saunders travels to India to witness firsthand a fifteen-year-old boy who has been meditating motionless under a tree for months without food or water, and who many followers believe is the reincarnation of the Buddha. Matthew Power reveals trickle-down economics at work in a Philippine garbage dump. Jason Anthony describes the challenges of everyday life in Vostok, the coldest place on earth, where temperatures dip as low as minus-129 degrees and where, in midsummer, minus-20 degrees is considered a heat wave.

David Halberstam, in one of his last published essays, recalls how an inauspicious Saigon restaurant changed the way he and other reporters in Vietnam saw the world. Ian Frazier analyzes why we get sick when traveling in out-of-the-way places. And Kevin Fedarko embarks on a drug-fueled journey in Djibouti, chewing psychotropic foliage in “the worst place on earth.”

Closer to home, Steve Friedman profiles a 410-pound man who set out to walk cross-country to lose weight and find happiness. Rick Bass chases the elusive concept of the West in America, and Jonathan Stern takes a hilarious Lonely Planet approach to his small Manhattan apartment.

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The Best American Travel Writing 2007

The Best American Travel Writing 2007

The Best American Travel Writing 2007

The Best American Travel Writing 2007

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Overview

“Travel is not about finding something. It’s about getting lost — that is, it is about losing yourself in a place and a moment. The little things that tether you to what’s familiar are gone, and you become a conduit through which the sensation of the place is felt.” — from the introduction by Susan Orlean

The twenty pieces in this year’s collection showcase the best travel writing from 2006. George Saunders travels to India to witness firsthand a fifteen-year-old boy who has been meditating motionless under a tree for months without food or water, and who many followers believe is the reincarnation of the Buddha. Matthew Power reveals trickle-down economics at work in a Philippine garbage dump. Jason Anthony describes the challenges of everyday life in Vostok, the coldest place on earth, where temperatures dip as low as minus-129 degrees and where, in midsummer, minus-20 degrees is considered a heat wave.

David Halberstam, in one of his last published essays, recalls how an inauspicious Saigon restaurant changed the way he and other reporters in Vietnam saw the world. Ian Frazier analyzes why we get sick when traveling in out-of-the-way places. And Kevin Fedarko embarks on a drug-fueled journey in Djibouti, chewing psychotropic foliage in “the worst place on earth.”

Closer to home, Steve Friedman profiles a 410-pound man who set out to walk cross-country to lose weight and find happiness. Rick Bass chases the elusive concept of the West in America, and Jonathan Stern takes a hilarious Lonely Planet approach to his small Manhattan apartment.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780618582181
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 10/10/2007
Series: Best American Travel Writing Series
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

About The Author
JASON WILSON, series editor, is the author of Godforsaken Grapes, Boozehound, and The Cider Revival. He is the creator of the newsletter and podcast Everyday Drinking. Wilson has been the series editor of The Best American Travel Writing since its inception in 2000. His work can be found at jasonwilson.com.

Read an Excerpt

Introduction

The second-worst travel experience I ever had was on a misbegotten trip to a marvelous place that I had gone to for all the wrong reasons. The trip was a few years ago; the place was Bhutan; the reason was love, or what I had mistakenly identified as love, which is probably, technically speaking, the greatest and also the stupidest reason ever to go anywhere. It was not my first time in Bhutan. I had gone there about six months earlier for a story about couples who were attending Bhutanese fertility festivals in hopes of heading home with the ultimate family souvenir. The timing happened to be quite awkward for me — I was writing about happy families fulfilling their dream of having children, but the trip itself, coincidentally, marked the beginning of the end of my marriage. My then-husband had planned to come to Bhutan with me, and we figured a trip somewhere interesting and beautiful might extend the lease on our relationship; instead, I headed off with the fertility group, and he stayed back in New York to start clearing out his half of the apartment. I was pretty blue, but after a few days in Bhutan — where, by the way, most houses are decorated with large, celebratory paintings of penises — I fell madly in love with the tour guide and I started to enjoy the trip a whole lot more. When I returned to New York I was ecstatic. I was convinced that Tshering was my soul mate, notwithstanding the fact that he lived on the other side of the Earth, was somewhat age-inappropriate, and shared with me no cultural, social, intellectual, or religious common ground. Still, I adored him, and I think he adored me, and over the next few months we burned up hundreds of dollars on long-distance phone calls (this was in the pre-Vonage age), planning our future together (doesn’t everybody live part- time in Manhattan and part-time in the Himalayas?), trying to figure out how to wangle a visa for him, and reminiscing about every detail of our long (two- week) shared personal history.
Finally, the phone calls didn’t feel satisfying enough and Tshering’s visa wasn’t forthcoming, so I mustered the frequent-flyer miles and the nerve to go back to Bhutan to visit him. My trip itself was a trial: the flight from Bangkok to Bhutan was diverted to Calcutta because of fog or smoke or something, so we were led off the plane, stripped of our passports, and locked in a Grade D Calcutta airport hotel. We weren’t allowed to leave the premises because we didn’t have visas to enter India, and no one would say when we might hope to get to Bhutan. The owners of the hotel — twin men with what looked like twin wives — doled out skimpy portions of rice for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and seemed not happy to have us as guests. We had no idea when or how we were going to leave — in fact, we were warned that we were probably going to have to finish the trip over land, a three-day haul via Indian Air Force transport vans, crossing through Assam, which was convulsing with civil war. I was one of only two Americans in the stranded group; the other was a guy who owned a fishing lure company in Minnesota, being flown to Bhutan by the king, who wanted some special flies tied for a spring trout outing.
Finally — probably the hotel was running out of rice and the owners had resolved to get rid of us — our flight was cleared for departure and we made it to Bhutan, and I had what I realize now was the inevitably strained reunion with Tshering. Anyone who has ever fallen in love while traveling — I think it’s safe to say it is not a small group — has probably gone through this same jarring experience: the person you so effortlessly and ebulliently connected with while you were traveling requires a little more effort and inspires a little more awkwardness when you see him or her again, and ordinary life intrudes. Tshering and I were fumbling and shy with each other, and I had moments of wondering what on earth I was doing, but what else could we do? We headed off through the ragged gorgeousness of Bhutan, and after a few days the same giddiness we’d felt the first time around started to return. What is it about traveling that inspires that feeling? Is it that when you’re with someone and you’re not at home, you’re in a sort of bubble together, floating through the world, peering out at it together, bound to nothing — jobs, chores, social obligations, dry cleaning that needs to be dropped off — but each other? Is it that when you travel you can invent yourself anew, and the new person you become is freer and more engaged and more engaging than the persona you left at home? And even if you’re not in love, is this still what makes travel so seductive — the creation of a new buoyant version of yourself, unpunctured by the familiarity of people who know you and know that you have another self? Whatever it is that makes it feel this way, travel is utterly romantic and the experience of it is the experience of life idealized, and it makes you feel romantic, and romance- able, and this transformation seems more what makes it magical than any particular lovely landscape or fascinating culture you might encounter. Even bad experiences when you travel seem almost mythical — they are bad experiences, but also stories that you will tell around a table sometime later, exotic and fascinating in their badness.
Five days into my trip, Tshering and I arrived in Thimphu, the capital of Bhutan — a town on a mountainside with a scattering of little shops and a paved road or two. It was a Saturday night, as I recall. I thought we might rest a while and then go out for yak tea and some sightseeing. We arrived at the guesthouse, and as I tossed my suitcase on the bed, I noticed that Tshering was lingering in the doorway with an odd look on his face. I asked him why he wasn’t coming in, and he finally muttered that he needed to tell me something. He had a girlfriend. And not only did he have a girlfriend, he had a girlfriend whose family owned the guesthouse we were in, and therefore he couldn’t be seen with me since . . . well, for all the obvious reasons. He was depositing me in the room and would join me in a day or so. And then he left.
There are always moments during travel when you feel lonely, even when you’re traveling with the closest of friends, but those moments are usually subsumed quickly by the moments of delight and fascination and excitement and marvel. This was not one of those moments. I have never, ever felt so profoundly alone. I was in a country where I knew absolutely no one at all except for the jerk who had just ditched me, where I was as far away from home as it was possible to be and still be on Planet Earth; I was in a small country — fewer than a million people — where everyone really and truly knows everyone, where there are practically no strangers and certainly no culture of comfortable stranger-hood, no cafés or pubs where you might unobtrusively spend a day or two people-watching and nursing a cup of coffee. There isn’t even any coffee. There weren’t any other tourists — Bhutan has always limited its visitors to a thousand or so a year and makes sure they are scattered about, and what’s more, I was there during the off- season. I have always winced at the sight of tour buses, but for the first time in my life I really would have welcomed one, and would have been very happy if I could have insinuated myself into a big, loud band of, say, Texans on a tour of Bhutanese souvenir shops . . . anything. Usually when I’m on the road and feeling low, if I can’t go to a café, I hole up in my room for a few hours and watch CNN and declare the experience relaxing. This was not an option either: television was, at that time, illegal in Bhutan. Also, there was no Internet. Also, there were very, very few telephones. I didn’t have a cell phone that worked in Bhutan, and anyway, it was the middle of the night anywhere I might have called. There was no movie theater, no gym, no shopping to speak of, no diversion to distract me from the profound sense that I was entirely by myself in the whole wide world. In my many years of traveling, I have developed many excellent ways to pass time when I’m bored or a little lonesome. Some are admirable (going to museums and historical sites, talking to local people, exploring neighborhoods) and some are, perhaps, something else (once, when stranded for many days on a story in Mississippi, I spent what seemed like most of my time practicing running on a treadmill with my eyes closed and dyeing my hair different colors). I didn’t feel like doing anything useful or edifying and there wasn’t much in Thimphu that I could picture as a satisfying time-waster. I thought I might possibly go crazy.
With whatever little energy I still had, I forced myself to leave the guesthouse and walk up and down the little streets. It was early evening. Kids were chasing stray dogs and kicking pebbles; groups of teenage girls, their heads bent together, rushed by whispering and giggling; a small, stout woman with a round-headed baby strapped to her back leaned on a wall and watched me somberly. There was no one, no one, no one to talk to. The few shops nearby were already shuttered except for a small bookstore. A bookstore! Perfect! I hurried across the street, picturing myself browsing for a few hours until I would be tired enough to go back to the dread guesthouse and sleep. The store was dusty and drafty, with high ceilings and rough wooden floors. The shelves were mostly empty except for English-as-a- second-language manuals, Bhutanese grammar-school textbooks in Dzongkha and Nepali, secondhand Penguin editions of Shakespeare, Indian movie magazines, Buddhist histories. I kept trying to make myself take great interest in pictorials of Bollywood actresses. After a few minutes, I realized that I couldn’t even pretend. I gave up, put the magazines back in the rack, nodded my thanks to the storekeeper, and walked out to the street again. It was even emptier, and I was even more aware of my isolation. But somehow, at this point, I gave in to the pure experience of being alone, and while making my way back to the guesthouse I had the distinct sensation of dematerializing. It really was as if I had vanished, become disembodied, and was watching time unspool in front of me, untouched. It was, after I finally yielded to it, kind of fascinating to feel so light and invisible, unnoticed, unremarked upon, unknown.
To make a long story short, I did rematerialize a day later when Tshering sheepishly retrieved me from the guesthouse. By then I had walked every inch of Thimphu, repacked my suitcase, figured Tshering for the cad he was, and determined that my future was probably not going to be as one-half of a Bhutan-Manhattan commuter marriage, but that I would at least make the best of my last few days on the trip, since Bhutan is, truly, the most beautiful place on Earth. I’d also figured out something about the nature of travel. For the first time, it seemed clear to me that travel is not about finding something: it’s about getting lost — that is, it is about losing yourself in a place and a moment. The little things that tether you to what’s familiar are gone, and you become a conduit through which the sensation of the place is felt. It’s nice to see the significant centers of civilization, the important buildings, the monumental landscapes, but what seems most extraordinary is feeling yourself lifted out of your ordinary life into something new. Sometimes, as was the case for me on that trip, there’s a little more lift than you’re prepared for, and you get that short-of-breath, wide-of-pupil heart skip- thumping that accompanies the powerful feeling that you should have never left home. (I have to confess here that, inveterate traveler that I am, I also feel that before I start a trip, too. As I’m packing I feel myself resisting, resisting, resisting, thinking to myself that I really would prefer staying home, that home is very nice, that I have everything I want at home, that I can just take it easy in my very own living quarters and eat my very own familiar food and have no difficulty using the telephone/getting cash/finding my way around/understanding things, and that this travel business is just a headache.) And yet, I still go, and once I’m on my way I feel like I’m sitting in a Phenomenon-a-tron, where everything is incredibly interesting — the shape of street signs, the clothes people wear, the way things smell. I once took a trip to China with a group of very conservative folks from Utah. They seemed to hate everything about being in China, but most of all they seemed to hate the food, and fortunately (for them) one of the group had brought along several cases of granola bars, which they ate for most of their meals. I was delighted by this, since I got to eat as much of everything as I wanted (not to mention drinking all the beer) while they gnawed on Nature Valley Oats ’N Honey. I wondered — and still wonder — why they had bothered to come at all.
Believe it or not, Tshering and I are still friends. He e-mailed me recently and encouraged me to come visit Bhutan again, which I would love to do. He’s married now, and has a daughter, and I’m married and have a son. Our kids are about the same age. I think we’d all enjoy going out together some Saturday night in Thimphu.
But enough about me. The reason I have your attention and the chance to spin my own yarns here is because I have been invited to take the ultimate armchair journey over the last several months, which entailed reading a hundred or so wonderful pieces about other people’s travels and choosing the twenty that would make up this book. I read most of them during a long, cold, wet, late, lingering winter, so those of you who wrote about temperate climates, thank you. Each year a different person takes this armchair journey, and I’m sure all of us have different reasons for our choices. My rules were very uncomplicated: one, the stories had to take place somewhere in the physical world, and two, I had to like them a lot. As far as the first rule, I wouldn’t even say I adhered strictly to it, since at least one of these pieces takes place in the imaginary world. I am just not a category person, so I had very loose standards for what constituted a travel piece. Description of an interesting place was a plus, but not a necessity; movement from A to B was typical but not required; immersion in an unfamiliar culture was impressive but not sufficient. I have a soft spot for pieces that illuminate places that would never make it into Luxury SpaFinder magazine, and for writers who really can make you feel like they saw something with fresh eyes and were truly surprised and interested in what they saw. The best travel writing, in my mind, is just a written document of a conversation with a captivating person who is just a little braver, a little smarter, a little more observant, a little funnier, and a little wiser than I, who has gone places I’ve either never gone and never will go, or places I’ve been to many times and never noticed quite the way he or she does, or can talk about the process of going and coming in a way I never imagined before. I’m happy to report that I think all twenty of these pieces have that in common. Otherwise, they are literally and figuratively all over the map.
Travel writing, long ago, didn’t have to be much more than a dispatch from the outer reaches; travel writers were the people willing to go to scary places, and what made their work exceptional was the fact that they went there at all. These days, there’s nowhere in the world that you can’t visit on Google Maps, so the travel writer as explorer is an outdated notion. And yet I still think travel writing matters. Its value now is something much deeper — it’s the writer’s journey, and the emotional and intellectual weight of the writer’s observations, that means something. In a way, these are the exact opposite of the travel you might do on Google Maps — these stories are the world not as it can be plotted by satellite but as it is observed and mediated in a very subjective and personal way. I’m glad for the chance to see the exact layout of Brisbane, Australia, as seen from outer space (the image that has just popped up on my computer’s streaming map gadget), but I’m happier to read about Ian Frazier’s hilariously bad kielbasa and Reesa Grushka’s exquisite and sad stay in Jerusalem and Nando Parrado’s unimaginable endurance, even though the satellite map is more comprehensive and more “perfect” and even allows me to zoom in and count the hairs on the chin of the guy sitting on the park bench in the middle of Brisbane. Such details are probably useful sometimes (if you’re, say, thinking of opening a barbershop in Brisbane), but they don’t have the same power to feed your soul.
Between the time I started writing this introduction and today, when I’m finishing it, a terrible thing happened — David Halberstam, whose beautiful piece “The Boys of Saigon” is included here, was killed in a car accident. He was a great writer, a brilliant reporter, an intrepid traveler. He was one of those writers who fed the soul. When I first read his piece — a memoir from his time in Vietnam — I was struck by how long and exceptional his career had been, and was marveling that he was at work on another book. I was excited to include a piece by a true master of the form in this collection. I didn’t know Halberstam personally, but he was a real inspiration to me, and I was heartsick to hear this news. It’s a huge loss.
I hope you enjoy the ride through this book. It was a great treat to put it together, and a particularly vicarious pleasure, since I travel a lot less these days now that I have a small person to take care of. Which brings me to one last comment: you now know the second-worst travel experience I ever had. The very worst one would have to be any trip I didn’t take for one reason or another — sloth, lack of time, lack of imagination, inadequate luggage, whatever. That’s why travel writing is so marvelous: now, through these pieces, I’ve been able to take these trips instead.

— Susan Orlean

Copyright © 2007 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Introduction copyright © 2007 by Susan Orlean. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Jason Wilson ix Introduction by Susan Orlean xiii

JASON ANTHONY. A Brief and Awkward Tour of the End of the Earth 1 from WorldHum.com

RICK BASS. Lost in Space 8 from the Los Angeles Times Magazine

KEVIN FEDARKO. High in Hell 24 from Esquire

IAN FRAZIER. A Kielbasa Too Far 43 from Outside

STEVE FRIEDMAN. Lost in America 54 from Backpacker

ELIZABETH GILBERT. Long Day’s Journey into Dinner 71 from GQ

REESA GRUSHKA. Arieh 89 from the Missouri Review

DAVID HALBERSTAM. The Boys of Saigon 107 from Gourmet

PETER HESSLER. Hutong Karma 115 from The New Yorker

EDWARD HOAGLAND. Miles from Nowhere 129 from The American Scholar

IAN PARKER. Birth of a Nation? 148 from The New Yorker

NANDO PARRADO. The Long Way Home 168 from Outside

ANN PATCHETT. Do Not Disturb 184 from Gourmet

MATTHEW POWER. The Magic Mountain 190 from Harper’s Magazine

DAVID RAKOFF. Streets of Sorrow 210 from Condé Nast Traveler

GEORGE SAUNDERS. The Incredible Buddha Boy 219 from GQ

GARY SHTEYNGART. Brazil’s Untamed Heart 246 from Travel Leisure

ANDREW SOLOMON. Circle of Fire 255 from The New Yorker

JONATHAN STERN. The Lonely Planet Guide to My Apartment 288 from The New Yorker

CYNTHIA ZARIN. Fantasy Island 292 from Gourmet

Contributors’ Notes 299 Notable Travel Writing of 2006 304
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