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Armchair Travel October 2019
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| Hungry: Eating, Road-Tripping, and Risking It All With the Greatest Chef in the World by Jeff GordinierWhat it is: a memoir, biography, and culinary travelogue all in one evocative, innovative book.
What it's about: With his marriage ending, food critic Jeff Gordinier traveled with charismatic, celebrated Danish chef and restaurateur René Redzepi, who was himself restless and at loose ends, on various adventures to discover local ingredients and interesting flavors.
Locations visited: Mexico, Australia, the U.S., Denmark, and Norway. |
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| Into the Planet: My Life as a Cave Diver by Jill HeinerthWhat it's about: Professional cave diver Jill Heinerth describes overcoming her fears and exploring underwater areas from Florida to the Antarctic as well as discussing scientific and historical discoveries.
Did you know? "Cave diving is so risky that even the most casual enthusiasts can't get life insurance at any price."
Why you might like it: Into the Planet is a thrilling combination of adventure and science as well as the inspiring memoir of a trailblazing woman working in a male-dominated profession. |
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| Ten Years a Nomad: A Traveler's Journey Home by Matt KepnesWhat it is: a thoughtful memoir by a recent college graduate who left his unfulfilling corporate life behind to travel...and didn't stop for ten years.
Is it for you? Ten Years a Nomad covers Matt Kepnes' personal growth over the course of the decade as much as his adventures, so those who appreciate reflective travelers will enjoy it the most.
About the author: Kepnes, a blogger and the bestselling author of How to Travel the World on $50 a Day, has traveled to over 90 countries. |
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| Escalante's Dream: On the Trail of the Spanish Discovery of the Southwest by David RobertsJuly 1776: Led by two Franciscan priests, the 12-man Domínguez-Escalante expedition set out for Monterey and traveled 1,700 miles across what is now New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and Arizona.
September 2017: Accompanied by his wife of nearly five decades, mountaineer and author David Roberts, weak from cancer treatment, retraced the Franciscans' little-remembered journey over the course of six weeks, contemplating the expedition's historical importance and poignantly examining his own life.
Autumn 2019: As of this writing, Roberts is still traveling and just completed a trip to Quebec City. |
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| Under the Same Sky: From Starvation in North Korea to Salvation in America by Joseph Kim with Stephan TaltyWhat it's about: Joseph Kim's family, like many others in North Korea, was devastated by the 1990s famine: his father died, his mother sold his sister...and he became a starving street child, who did what he had to do to survive before escaping to China and eventually the United States.
Read it for: the searing, matter-of-fact look at life in an authoritarian country.
Who it's for: readers moved by the depictions of North Korean life found in Barbara Demick's Nothing to Envy, Suki Kim's Without You, There Is No Us, and Blaine Harden's Escape from Camp 14. |
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Under Magnolia: A Southern Memoir by Frances MayesThe best-selling author of Under the Tuscan Sun shares the story of her youth in the American South and her decision to return to the places that shaped her early ideals, a journey marked by her regional travels and growing appreciation for Southern writers.
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Under the Blue Beret: A U.n. Peacekeeper in the Middle East by Terry BurkeFrom the 1950s to the present day, Canadian peacekeepers have been employed as a stabilizing force and an instrument of peace in every corner of the globe.
In this first-hand account, Terry "Stoney" Burke paints a graphic picture of a peacekeeper’s life in one of the most tumultuous and dangerous regions of the world. From the war-torn island of Cyprus, through his later missions in Israel, Lebanon, and Syria, we follow him as he weaves an intriguing narrative of life as a Canadian peacekeeper.
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Contact your librarian for more great books!
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