Best of
Travelogue
1
مارک دو پلو
منصور ضابطیان
سفرهایی به این سوی و آن سوی جهان که نمی دانم هدف واقعی اش چه بوده و چیست.اما این را می دانم که با سفر، مفهوم لذت از جهان هستی را بیشتر دریافته ام و احساس خوشبختی بیشتری کرده ام. این احساس خوشبختی به واسطه ی بخش خوشگذرانه ی سفر نیست که در حضر هم می توان خوش گذراند، اما احساس خوشبختی نکرد.این احساس تنها با تجربه ی سبک زندگی مردم جهان است که پدید می آید.***"Mark de Polo" is a newer compilation of my trips in the last two tears; trips to different corners of the globe, trips that I am not aware of their true objectives, then and now.But I'm aware that with travelling I have become known to the concept of enjoying the universe and I have felt happier. This feeling of happiness is not a result of joy of travelling, for one can feel joy at home, but not happy. This feeling is created only by experiencing the lifestyles of people of the world.
The Calling: Unleash Your True Self
Priya Kumar
It is an encounter with the truth, the wisdom and the force that is innate to us all. At the brink of a divorce and personal breakdown, Arjun took a trip into the heart of the Himalayas, on the insistence of a sadhu, who predicted that the journey up to Hemkund Sahib would align him to his purpose and change his life forever. At every turn the mountains holds secrets and tests that urge Arjun to evolve into the person he had denied to be - himself. Pretenses, falsities, confusions and untruths fall apart as Arjun is forced to confront the mess he had created in his life. What started off as an opportunity to escape reality, turned out to be an opportunity to escape from the dwindling spiral of self-created misery. Filled with spiritual insights and sprinkled with light humor, this story will help you find your calling, your voice and who knows, even your true self.
The Call of the Man-Eater
Kenneth Anderson
In this book the jungle scenario is crowded with a hyena, a jackal, a bear, a barking deer and a few snakes which the hunter-writer tamed and kept as pets around him.Kenneth Anderson (1910-74) hailed from a Scottish family settled in India for six generations. His love for the denizens of Indian jungle led him to big game hunting and eventually to writing real-life adventure stories. His books are hailed as classics of jungle lore.
A Tramp Abroad / Following the Equator / Other Travels
Mark Twain
Like those earlier books, the frequently hilarious A Tramp Abroad (1880)-based on his family's 16-month sojourn in Europe from April 1878 to August 1879-blends autobiography and fiction, facts and tall tales. Twain's send-up of Old World customs as well as his critical dissections of Wagnerian opera and the German language are often interlaced with American reminiscences, whether in the form of an extended discourse on the language of blue jays or the recollection of an elaborate practical joke in Hannibal, Missouri, involving a printer's devil and a skeleton. A Tramp Abroad is presented here with the author's original sketches. Written at a time of financial trouble and personal loss (the death of the author's beloved daughter Susy), Following the Equator (1897) is a darker and more politicized account of a lecture tour around the world, with Fiji, Australia, New Zealand, Ceylon, India, Mauritius, and South Africa among the stopovers. Using humorous but often biting anecdotes as well as keen journalist reporting, the book details bush life in Australia and the culture of the Maoris in New Zealand, while lashing out at social inequities such as the Indian caste system, and racist imperialism connected with European settlement and gold mining in southern Africa. Twain rounds out the volume with extensive historical accounts ranging from the Black Hole of Calcutta to the events in South Africa that would lead shortly to the Boer War. This volume also includes 13 shorter pieces, most of them uncollected by the author, including a lengthy firsthand narrative of the shah of Persia's 1873 visit to London, an 1891 description of Richard Wagner's operas performed at Bayreuth, an 1897 account of Queen Victoria's jubilee in London, and an 1898 analysis of vitriolic Austrian parliamentary proceedings. The texts of several of these "other travels" are presented in newly corrected and fully restored versions.