Armchair Travel
August 2023
Please note: This is the final issue of Armchair Travel.
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Recent Releases
A Traveler's Guide to the End of the World : Tales of Fire, Wind, and Water
by David Gessner

The world is burning and the seas are rising. How do we navigate this new age of extremes? In A Traveler's Guide to the End of the World, David Gessner takes readers on an eye-opening tour of climate hotspots from the Gulf of Mexico to the burning American West to New York City to the fragile Outer Banks, where homes are being swallowed by the seas. He does so with his usual sense of humor, compassion, and a willingness to talk to anyone, providing an informative and sobering yet convivial guide for the age of fire, heat, wind, and water. Gessner approaches scientists and thinkers with a father’s What will the world be like in 2064, when his daughter Hadley is his age now? What is the future of weather? The future of heat, storms, and fire?
Coffee first, then the world : one woman's record-breaking pedal around the planet
by Jenny Graham

"In 2018, amateur cyclist Jenny Graham left family and friends behind in Scotland to become the fastest woman to cycle around the world. Alone and unsupported, she crossed the finish line at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin four months later, smashing the female record by nearly three weeks. With infectious wit and honesty, Jenny brings readers into her remarkable Round the World adventure, as she takes on four continents, 16 countries--and countless cups of coffee. Her journey swerves from terrifying nearroad collisions in Russia and weather extremes in Australia to breathtaking landscapes in Mongolia and exhilarating wildlife encounters in North America. Tight on time and money, she resorts to fixing her bike on the fly, sleeping on roadsides and often riding through the night to stay on track and complete her mission. As she battles physical and mental challenges to race against the clock, Jenny gradually opens up to the joy of the adventure and all its daily discoveries. She gives in to her impulse toconnect with people, making friends with strangers across the globe and embracing new cultures."
The Last Ride of the Pony Express: My 2,000-Mile Horseback Journey Into the Old West
by Will Grant

Hi-yo, Chicken Fry and Badger! Away! With his two delightful horses, cowboy and journalist Will Grant left St. Joseph, Missouri, in 2019, heading for Sacramento, California. He followed the 1860s path that the Pony Express riders took and explored what the route is like today.

Reviewers say: "a paean to the horse and the American West, both of which Grant writes about with beauty and precision" (Washington Post). 

Read this next: For more evocative equine travelogues, pick up Elizabeth Letts' The Ride of Her Life or Rinker Buck's The Oregon Trail. 
100 places to see after you die : a travel guide to the afterlife
by Ken Jennings

The legendary Jeopardy! champion and host presents a humorous travel guide to the afterlife with destinations from literature, mythology and pop culture—from Dante's Inferno to the TV series The Good Place.
Paris : secret gardens, hidden places, and stories of the City of Light
by Mary Sperling McAuliffe

"A multilayered exploration of Paris, its people and stories. This book weaves a narrative that takes the readers into secret and hidden places, even in the midst of the most well-known Paris destinations."
Walking With Sam: A Father, a Son, and Five Hundred Miles Across Spain
by Andrew McCarthy

What it is: an intimate, amusing memoir chronicling the ups and downs (both literal and figurative) of actor Andrew McCarthy and his 19-year-old son Sam as they walked Spain's 500-mile Camino de Santiago in 2021.

Don't miss: the historical details, the musings on fatherhood, and the descriptions of the people and places they see.

Read this next: Andrew McCarthy's earlier books, or try Calvin Hennick's Once More to the Rodeo for another thoughtful look at fatherhood, though it's centered around a road trip with a five-year-old.
Brave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany of the...
by Melissa L. Sevigny

Branching out: In 1938, two women botanists, Elzada Clover and Lois Jotter, left the classroom to survey and catalog the plant life of the Grand Canyon...by taking a treacherous trip down the Colorado River.

Don't miss: details on the many barriers they faced, the plants they found, and the history of the area, as well as maps and photos.

Reviewers say: "A beautiful tribute" (Kirkus Reviews); "[Melissa] Sevigny recreates their expedition in novelistic detail" (Publishers Weekly). 
Graveyard of the Pacific: Shipwreck and Survival on America's Deadliest Waterway
by Randall Sullivan

The graveyard: the Columbia River Bar, the treacherous miles-long and miles-wide area where the Columbia River enters the Pacific Ocean in a fury, fed by Rocky Mountain water runoff.

What happens: Nearly 70-year-old writer Randall Sullivan and his friend Ray, who's the same age, cross the area in a Hobie trimaran, which is essentially a sailing kayak built for two.

Is it for you? This "strikingly rendered tale" (Kirkus Reviews) is "a thrill ride" (Publishers Weekly) combining history, the voyage, and the author's reflections on his and Ray's lives, both of whom grew up amid violence. 
Focus on: Traveling Celebrities
Greenlights
by Matthew McConaughey

Alright, Alright, Alright: Academy Award-winning actor Matthew McConaughey serves up a candid, conversational memoir. 

Why you might like it: While full of stories, advice, and insights, Greenlights is also something of a travelogue, chronicling growing up in Texas, a school year in Australia, life in Hollywood, a trip down the Amazon, visiting Africa, a road trip across America, and more.

Reviewers say: "both calming and laugh, laugh, laugh-out-loud funny" (Washington Post); "entertaining and full of good lessons" (Kirkus Reviews).
The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey
by Candice Millard

Did you know? In addition to being a war hero and president of the U.S., Teddy Roosevelt was an explorer who co-led a 1913-14 expedition to map a nearly 1,000-mile tributary of the Amazon.

What happened: After losing the election that would have made him president for the third time, Teddy set out with his son Kermit and Brazilian explorer Cândido Rondon on a trip full of trials and danger.

Read this next: If you like this "marvelously atmospheric" (Booklist) account, try Larry Rohter's biography of Rondon, Into the Amazon. 
Where the Deer and the Antelope Play: The Pastoral Observations of One Ignorant...
by Nick Offerman

What it is: actor Nick Offerman's memoir covering three trips he took and his thoughts on nature, history, politics, and more.

The trips: a hiking trip to Glacier National Park with two friends, musician Jeff Tweedy and novelist George Saunders; an extended visit to England, where he spent time with farmer and writer James Rebanks; and in 2020, as the pandemic was starting, a road trip around part of the U.S. in an Airstream trailer with his wife, actress Megan Mullally. 

Reviewers say: "At once a travelogue, a manifesto, and a rousing call to get outside" (Esquire).
Contact your librarian for more great books!
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