Travel Fiction: Eight Books That Make Us Want To Travel

Bullfighter

First Posted: 21/02/2012 12:01 Updated: 23/02/2012 17:01

You wake up one morning and there it is: Spring sunshine, pushing us over the crest of Winter, opening up the possibilities of the year.

And like mice sniffing our way out of hibernation, our first thought is always: where shall we go now?

At this time of year nothing excites the soul like the thought of travel, and nothing inspires those thoughts better than literature.

From the dust and blood of Hemingway's Spain to the swinging fruit of Arundhati Roy's Southern India, a good work of fiction can evoke a sense of a place better than any photograph or film.

Then, of course, there are the travel memoirs - not dispassionate travel guides but the works of writers like John Steinbeck or Bill Bryson, who make an art form from observing the landscapes and characters that populate their journeys.

To celebrate the power of inspiring travel books, we've rounded up eight of our favourites. If you have any suggestions of your own, please add them to the comments below.

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance - Robert M. Pirsig
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Although there are motorbikes, roads and scenery aplenty, Pirsig's book is less the story of a physical journey than a mental one as he uses the metaphor of motorcycle maintenance to explore various branches of philosophy.

Insight into: North America, the philosophy of science

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You wake up one morning and there it is: Spring sunshine, pushing us over the crest of Winter, opening up the possibilities of the year. And like mice sniffing our way out of hibernation, our first...
You wake up one morning and there it is: Spring sunshine, pushing us over the crest of Winter, opening up the possibilities of the year. And like mice sniffing our way out of hibernation, our first...
 
 
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08:18 AM on 03/05/2012
The best travel book that i have ever read was Take Me With You by Brad Newsham. This wonderful book takes you on a 100 day backpack trip around the world. He visits places like Philippines, India, Egypt, Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, and South Africa, and profiles dozens of strangers he met along the way. Its well worth the read .
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11:52 PM on 02/25/2012
On the Road (Kerouac) and The Drifters (James Michener) both made my feet itch. The AA Road Map of Europe was a more practical help though.
06:35 PM on 02/24/2012
"Between the woods and the water" by Patrick Leigh Fermor (walking through 1930's Europe) and "The gentle art of tramping" by Stephen Graham (a gentleman tramp in the 1910s) are highly recommendable.
AllegroTroppo
Appeaser feeds crocodile hopes to be eaten last
04:20 AM on 02/22/2012
Treasure Island; Robinson Crusoe; 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea; Voltaire; Ivanhoe, Return from the Stars (Lem) etc.
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
09:02 PM on 02/21/2012
The Alexandria Quartet by Lawrence Durrell made me want to travel in the sixties, but I would not be anxious to go to that part of the world now.
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
03:07 PM on 02/21/2012
Would argue that 1 and 3 are not travel books in any real sense of the word
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KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
03:04 PM on 02/21/2012
Eastern Approaches is the book that started my lust for travel.
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AxelDC
12:59 PM on 02/21/2012
I don't need a book to stoke my love of travel.