Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Saturday, January 16, 2016

Expat

Expat


A story of redemption and renewal by way of Taipei ~ Review by MGoodwin
With frenetic Taiwan as the backdrop, this novel captures a relationship in decline, marred by uncertainty, loneliness, and suspicion. The expat lifestyle and its trappings--drivers, maids, banquet dinners--alienate Lace, the once doting wife, and push her in search of new relationships to fill the ebb of her own marriage. As the novel progresses, her own life begins to mirror that of a coterie of Expat friends, who share tales of infidelity and alcoholism over long lunches at the American Club, where grilled cheese is served alongside tears, angst, and longing for home. The story reaches a fever pitch when loss of friends, family, and love threatens everything Lace has. Highly recommend.

She is faced with people who aren't who they claim to be… #mysterybook EXPAT! #contemporary #romance"

Book Description:
The story takes place in the early 1990's, long before anyone had heard of the term "globalization". It is set in Asia and is seen through the eyes of an expatriate named Lacey. She is a young professional who decides to become a stay-at-home mom. Her husband is offered a job in Taiwan and they decide to accept. Lacey is going to live like a queen. She will have a driver, cook, maid and paid vacations. She will have more money than she ever dreamed of. However, almost immediately, she is faced with people who aren't who they claim to be…. and aren't who she wants them to be.

This world is full of excitement, new experiences, feng shui, underground cities, lies, misconceptions and heartbreak. As Lacey struggles with her marriage, struggles with her new role and struggles with betrayal, she also struggles with her identity.

Unfortunately, loneliness and frustration travel the ocean. Far away from home, people's frailties surface... the highs one experiences are higher, the lows are much lower. Lacey meets a captivating man named Steve. She flirts with betrayal and ultimately becomes a victim to his charm.


On Amazon!

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Kidnapped By Nuns

Kidnapped By Nuns
Available on Amazon

Excerpt of Review by John Bird

How could Robert Fuss not write a book after traveling to all 50 states and over 70 countries, and knowing four decades worth of presidents and congressmen? He has enough good stories to fill several life times; after reading his book, I think that being “kidnapped by nuns” would be an ordinary day for him.

Fuss writes: “If you can’t find a bus that is going where you want to go, then you need to want to go wherever the bus is going.” If any quote could summarize this book, that would be it. Fuss was always willing to get on the bus (or plane, or boat), just to see where it would go.

Book Description:

Taking readers on a journey over the last four decades of news from Hollywood to Washington and around the world from Andorra to Zimbabwe. Ride the campaign plane with Ronald Reagan, get the inside story of why Congress is such a disaster and share adventure travel stories from a globetrotting correspondent. Retired CBS News Correspondent Bob Fuss has traveled with half a dozen Presidents, covered Congress for more than 20 years and includes travelogues from his adventures around the world. One unique aspect is that while millions of listeners heard his daily reports, none knew he was disabled and has always walked on crutches.

Excerpt from Book: (Excellent!) Also visit his website: kidnappedbynuns.com

IN THE BEGINNING The offer was serious.

As I looked out to the pristine white sand beach from the thatched meeting house with no walls, the chief of this small village in Fiji told me I could choose any of the local girls and marry her and stay with my own hut in this little slice of paradise.

I must admit there have been times I've looked back at that moment in my twenties and questioned my choice, but there were so many adventures I would have missed in forty years as a radio correspondent: Visiting Cuba with the Pope, huddling with rebels during an uprising in the Philippines, covering half a dozen presidential campaigns, 15 Academy Awards shows and welcoming in the new millennium with the King of Tonga.

As a boy I always planned to be a lawyer. A Supreme Court Justice actually, but first things first. I was born on New York’s Long Island and spent my first five years there before my family moved to Los Angeles.

The move was actually because of me. Born with a whole range of birth defects similar to spina bifida, my parents were told I was unlikely to live past childhood. The lesson of never fully trusting doctors took hold early.

Pretty much everything below the waist was deformed in some way: my feet pointed the wrong direction, my knees didn't bend, internal organs were messed up, and lower vertebra were missing. Years later as I reported on abortion rights battles it would sometimes occur to me that if ultrasound tests had been used in the early 1950s there was no doubt a well-meaning doctor would have recommended terminating me.

Though I learned quickly to get around by pushing a chair or a wagon or anything else that was handy before learning to walk on crutches, my parents worried living in snow and ice in the winters would be too difficult for me. While it wasn't the only reason they decided to move to California, it was the main one.

They loaded up their rambler station wagon with three kids and a dog and headed west. My father had interviews lined up and joined an accounting firm soon after arriving in Los Angeles, where he would become a partner and stay the rest of his working life. Years later when I lived in New York and Washington and took up skiing there was some irony, but my parents loved California and hated the cold weather and were always happy they had moved.

They grew up in Brooklyn and met as teenagers. My father Milton was a natural athlete and my mother Carrie first noticed him on the basketball court. Though both were Jewish, neither would end up practicing the religion.

My mother’s Uncle Mickey Marcus was a hero in the creation of Israel. A West Point graduate and Army colonel, he helped organize and lead the new Israeli Army in 1948. His exploits were dramatized in the movie “Cast a Giant Shadow,”starring Kirk Douglas as Mickey, and while my mother tells me he was indeed larger than life, she complains the portrayal of her aunt by Angie Dickinson was completely wrong.

My mother was 18 when she married my father, who was 20 and already in the Army. Neither family was particularly thrilled with the idea and my mother traveled on her own to Alabama, where my dad was stationed at the time. Married by a Southern judge, my mother swore she could hear my father’s knees buckle when the judge, who took a liking to her, tried to give them something special and called his sister over to play some music and then declared them married “in Jesus’s name.”

My dad saw action in France as a medic in the infantry and like so many men of his generation never talked much about it later. He went to college on the GI bill and earned both a law degree and an accounting degree. He liked accounting more than law and spent his life as a CPA. He helped people run their businesses and file their taxes but never let them cheat, even a little.

My mother started college but it would be decades later when she would go back and finish; she then continued earning more degrees, ending up working as a marriage and family counselor. During the war she worked as a lab technician for the Army, drawing blood from prisoners of war at one point.

My older brother Michael was born when my dad was still overseas.

My memories of my first five years in New York are pretty foggy, glimpses really. I remember a fig tree in front of our house, I remember my mother was upset when I got the measles, and that I got a present that was hidden in the closet when my sister Lorri was born when I was three. I remember my first day at kindergarten.

Later in life when I spent time with my nephews and nieces I remember feeling a little sad to think that the wonderful experiences we had together when they were one and two and three years old might contribute to their lives in important ways, but like me when they got older they probably wouldn't remember any of it.

I was always a busy and active kid and never let anything slow me down. Every parent wants to protect his or her child, not only from getting hurt but also from failure, disappointment, and frustration. My parents were no different. I know now how hard it must have been for them to watch me leap into tasks I shouldn't have been able to do and figure it out as all kids do, by trial and error. For me that meant a lot of falling down and I am so grateful they let me.

My mother was chided at times by other parents for not rushing to pick up her handicapped child when I fell, not understanding the extraordinary gift she was giving me, the confidence to try new things and the knowledge that if I fell down it was up to me to figure out a way to get back up.

And so I ran and jumped and climbed and played baseball and football and wrestled and never let anyone else’s view of what I “should”be able to do hold me back. I loved the Slip’N Slide (a backyard toy that consists of a long “carpet”of plastic, made slippery from a stream of water from a garden hose) but I was dangerous because I’d run up to it and throw my crutches wildly to the side when I leaped on it. Soccer was scary too, since I hit the ball with the crutches and never played gently. I broke one crutch when I hit a basketball at full speed and lost one when a wave knocked me down at the beach.

But I'm sure my mom was dying inside when I started to skateboard. I would stand facing sideways and use both crutches on the same side to build up speed—and I was very fast. I remember people scattered when I would fly through Disneyland on my skateboard. I'm sure it was against their rules even then, but who was going to tell a little kid on crutches he had to walk?

Oddly one thing I never tried to do as a kid was go on an escalator. For some reason I was always hesitant about it and there was always an elevator or the stairs. So I never used one until I was 18 and in Moscow. I was on a tour with friends and we took a ride on Moscow’s subway. We went down an elevator but at the station we were exiting there was no elevator or stairs, only the longest escalator I've ever seen going up to the street. I could barely make out where it ended. I studied it for a minute or two, and then got on because there was no choice. It turned out to be easy. Now I always take the escalator because elevators are too slow.

It is not easy to know how much of what we are comes from our parents, but I always considered myself a good mix. From my mother came exuberance for life, a sense of adventure and joy, and a sense of optimism that rarely wavered. From my father came an important balance of caution and reserve, and an understanding of the importance of perseverance and hard work. Also from him I gained what every son most wants from his father: the knowledge that from the time we wore wacky headdresses in Indian Guides to the times I sent him tapes of my stories traveling with the president, he was always proud of me.

My first brush with journalism was not encouraging.

Several times as a small boy my picture or name would get into the paper in a story about one of the Christmas parties or other big events sponsored by what was then called the Crippled Children’s Society. (I never quite understood why “crippled”became a dirty word. It is descriptive and accurate. Then “handicapped,”another perfectly good word, fell into disrepute replaced by “disabled.”I sometimes hear “differently abled”or “physically challenged,”which make no sense since they describe everyone to one degree or another.)

At any rate, every time I was in the paper they got the story wrong: my name or age or what the event was. My first introduction to journalists certainly didn't lead me to want to become one.

Plus, I couldn't spell. I was awful. Before every spelling test in school I’d memorize all the words and get 100 percent, then forget them all the next day. Later, in essay tests I’d use my atrocious handwriting to hide my horrible spelling by blurring the letters I wasn’t sure of. Since I was an “A”student the teacher just assumed I spelled it right. At least until computers came along with spell check, writing was clearly not the profession for me.

I used to be smart when I was a kid, but other factors played in to my graduating from Stanford at 19.

When I started first grade in California there was no such thing as mainstreaming. Kids with disabilities, whether physical or developmental, were segregated in special schools. The schools I went to were small and they often combined two grades in a single classroom. They were prepared for kids with seizures or who needed help getting to the bathroom but didn't know quite what to do with a kid who learned all the material for both grades.

So they started skipping me ahead, one grade at a time.

Eventually they brought in a special teacher for the two “gifted students”they had. He would take Donald LeStrange and me for an hour or two a day. We would open the encyclopedia, and starting with “A,”just find things that interested us and we would learn about them. It was great fun.

There were also field trips. I remember one where we milked a goat, but the one where I played with a lion was much more exciting. I think I was eight.

The field trip was to a veterinary hospital out in the country. The rooms were organized in a circle around a central courtyard and our class was in one watching a cat get spayed. One whiff of the ether and I had to get out. Never the type to bother the teacher with such trivialities such as permission, I opened the sliding glass door to the courtyard outside and went exploring.

I found a lion cub.

He was tied with a chain and playing with a beach towel. I had a dog at home and I knew that game. So I picked up one end of the towel and started playing tug of war. We were having a great time when someone finally noticed I was missing and came looking for me. I didn't understand why they were all so upset; the baby lion and I were just playing.

It's amazing to think back now, but there was no scandal; no one got fired or went to jail or sued anyone. But I have a feeling the next class took a different field trip.

I liked school and was good at it, though looking back at some old report cards my mother saved, I discovered a pattern. I always had top grades in academic subjects but on the “citizenship”side there was always a lower mark for “obedience.”I never did get good at that. Being slightly disrespectful of authority is a common trait among journalists and helps us do our job.

I was also a bit of a ham and liked the spotlight. Even at four and five I would organize my friends and put on shows. Acting was fun and I was often in school plays. So when a casting agent came to the summer day camp I attended looking for some handicapped kids for a TV show I got on the list.

Rancho del Valle was the Crippled Children’s Society’s center in the San Fernando Valley where I grew up. I loved the place; it was where I learned to swim. There was also a sheltered workshop there where disabled adults were brought every day to “work.”As I look back at the wonderful times I had at the day camp, as well as at Camp Paivika, the summer sleepover camp in the mountains and all the terrific people who worked and volunteered there, I am struck by the fact that I never remember at any of those places meeting a successful handicapped adult. One who had a real job and lived an independent life. When I began volunteering to teach disabled children to swim in Northern Virginia decades later, I like to think I was also doing some teaching by example.

The casting agent was from the “Lassie”TV show. Three other kids and I were chosen for an episode about handicapped kids taken out to the woods to plant trees with Lassie and the Ranger. (He was on for a few seasons after Timmy.)

I would be out of school a week making a TV show, get to meet Lassie, and they were going to pay me $300! I was a ten year old on top of the world.

My first shock was that there was more than one Lassie. There were lots of them, including one just for fight scenes. And there were a few “Laddie”puppies on the set, training to be future Lassies. Lassie didn’t like to play; she was all business. And she was a he! But they did have golf carts and sometimes let me drive one around the back lot.

Our teacher in the show was played by Bonita Granville, who had been a movie star before marrying Jack Wrather, who owned the production company that made “Lassie.”

She didn't do much acting at that point in her life but wanted to do this role. Years later we met when I was covering a Reagan fundraiser and reminisced about the show.

The episode was built around my character, a sad and angry little boy who always felt sorry for himself because he needed crutches to walk. Talk about playing against type.

My big scene was after the little trees we planted burned in a fire and I had to cry as Lassie came over to console me. They told me to think of something sad and I thought about my own dog dying and the tears flowed.

Then of course came the happy ending when Lassie pulled me over to see new growth on my burnt tree and I finally got to smile. Hamlet it was not, but it almost changed the course of my life. The director and others were sure I had a real future as a child actor and I went to see an agent and had professional pictures taken (and have never looked that good since).

But my parents and I were in agreement that academic pursuits were a better future course. I got to hold the money in cash at the bank before putting it in my first savings account. There were lots of residual payments for reruns, the last when the show was sold to Japan. By the time I left for college at 16 I had $1,000, which was put to good use when I spent six months studying abroad.

The schools for disabled children were good but limited. I wouldn’t be able to take the kind of advanced courses I would need to get into a good college. My mother fought long and hard with the Los Angeles School District trying to convince them to let me into a regular school. Their greatest fear seemed to be that I would get hurt and they would get sued, but she finally succeeded and convinced the principal of Charles Evans Hughes Junior High School to take a chance and let me in.

And so in seventh grade at the age of 10 I entered a regular school for the first time. I then attended Taft High School and joined the debating team. I loved to argue and did well in debate, though I lost one debate in which my partner and I demolished the opposition. The judge said I was too sarcastic and I’m sure I was.

My classmates voted me “most serious”and I was terribly insulted. I thought I was hysterically funny but other people rarely see us as we see ourselves. Maybe I got funnier later.

In my senior year in high school I was called one day into the counselor’s office. There, I met a man from the California Department of Rehabilitation who told me the state would like to help me to be “rehabilitated,”so I could work someday and be independent. That seemed cool. He said they could pay for my tuition and books at any of the state colleges or universities. When I told him I had already gotten into Stanford, he said they could pay the equivalent of a state school’s tuition, and for my books. I said sure, since any little bit my parents could save would be welcome. I checked in once or twice at school and after I graduated met with a state counselor and explained what I was doing and what my plans were. He said they couldn’t do much to assist in getting me a job as a radio reporter but felt I was in good shape. The file was closed and I was declared officially rehabilitated.

Available on Amazon

Monday, November 24, 2014

Madagascar Travel Pack

Globetrotter_Travel_Pack_to_Madagascar_4th_edition_coverAmazon USA - Madagascar Travel Pack (Globetrotter Travel Packs) - 4th edition.

Guest article by: Authors ~ Derek Schuurman and Nivo Ravelojaona

Now in its 4th edition, the Globetrotter Travel Pack to Madagascar is the sole guidebook to this beguiling Indian Ocean island off the eastern coast of Africa to have been co-authored by European and Malagasy authors. It is also the only Madagascar guidebook to include a large and detailed fold-out map tucked into the back sleeve.

The 4th largest island in the world, Madagascar is above all known for being one of the world’s ‘Megadiversity hotspots’ as defined by Conservation International. Due to its geographical isolation of some 165 million years from Africa and then later from India, this island continent is a veritable treasure trove for naturalists and in excess of 80% of the life forms found there, exist nowhere else. However centuries of habitat destruction and more recently, mining and illegal timber extraction, as well as conversion of wetlands for riziculture, have led to many of its compellingly unique plants and animals being classified as endangered.

For tourists, Madagascar offers not just the opportunity to get to know sometimes critically endangered wildlife up close – and as is outlined in the book, often with relative ease - but also the chance to enjoy extraordinarily varied and photogenic landscapes, and to become acquainted with the multilayered and complex culture of the world’s only Afro-Asian nation.

The book has a detailed section with vital travel tips for visitors, as travel to the country should be planned carefully given its difficult geography and limited infrastructure. The book also reviews many of the best places to stay at all the sites of biological interest, as well as at some of its choice beach locations. The authors, London-based Derek Schuurman and Antananarivo-based Nivo Ravelojaona, have worked together in responsible tourism to Madagascar for 22 years and as such, have extensive experience to fall back on and substantial information which was utilised in the compilation of this book.

The book is divided into its highly contrasting regions, each of which is like a different country with its own climate, and often locally endemic assemblages of plants and animals, as well as different tribes of people resident there. In each of the regions, the most prominent highlights are featured and the book contains numerous photographs, mostly by renowned photographer Gerald Cubitt, affectionately regarded as ‘the Godfather of Wildlife Photography’. With responsible tourism in mind, special attention has been allocated to promoting public awareness of initiatives aimed at conservation, particularly where these benefit and are managed by local communities.

In summary the book showcases the best of what Madagascar has to offer potential visitors, with expert guidance as to where to go at different times of the year and how to make the most of any trip to the country.

Publisher: New Holland/Struik

Amazon Canada - Madagascar Travel Pack (Globetrotter Travel Packs)

Amazon UK - Madagascar Travel Pack (Globetrotter Travel Packs)

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

The Red Quest

The_Red_Quest_cover

The Red Quest: Travels through the Former Soviet Union

UK  USA CDN AU

Highly enjoyable, anyone up for a quick trip to Turkmenistan? 

~ Review by Richard A.

As a keen traveller myself with my own quest to follow I do enjoy reading the tales told by fellow likeminded adventurers. This book is particularly enjoyable as it gives a little bit of background, adds in some humour and gives you a realistic portrayal of what it would be like to visit some of these off the beaten track countries. After reading this book I certainly feel inspired to find out more about places like Turkmenistan or Kyrgyzstan. I even suggested to the other half that they could make for a romantic city break destinations. She failed to see it that way though.

Book Description: The Red Quest is the true story of one man's mission to visit every country of the former Soviet Union.

Along the way, the author samples fermented mare's milk in Kazakhstan, gets chased by hounds in Kiev, is detained by the police in Kyrgyzstan, travels through a snow blizzard between Armenia and Georgia, and gets mugged by a pensioner in Tajikistan. Oh, and he also takes a side trip to a genuine breakaway state where he is almost beaten up in a border hut. All in the name of The Red Quest!

Constantly berated by his friend for wanting to go to 'Turnipland', the Red Quest is a journey spanning half the world from Western Europe to the edge of China! And he is armed only with a pocket full of roubles and a turnip masher.

Join Jason Smart as he travels along the Red Quest through Latvia, Estonia, Slovakia, Lithuania, Hungary, Russia, Romania, Moldova. Ukraine, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Poland, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Belarus and East Germany!

Jason Smart

Jason Smart is a published travel writer, with articles appearing in both magazine and print.

The Red Quest: Travels through the Former Soviet Union

UK  USA CDN AU

Monday, December 30, 2013

Journeys with the Caterpillar: Travelling through the islands of Flores and Sumba, Indonesia

Journeys with the Caterpillar
















Guest Article by Shivaji Das

"The crowd lined the street, shoulder to shoulder. Fathers held young boys high, the older children climbing trees for better views. The pressure of the crowd built behind me, while before us, an opening formed in the crowd.  About fifteen men assembled around a tied buffalo: the sacrifices were about to begin."

When you think of Indonesia, do you think of volcanoes rising hurriedly from the seas to the skies?  Nestled within them are whimsical color-changing lakes sheltering tales of dead ancestors, wandering spirits, and local lore.  Do you think of baby Komodo Dragons scurrying for cover from their hungry mothers?  Maybe you've never visited these islands, but you’ll feel like you have when you've read JOURNEYS WITH THE CATERPILLAR.

There, in the midst of grinding poverty, you’ll find ever-blossoming smiles. Embark on this journey today.

The photographs from this trip were selected for Solo Exhibition at the National Library and the Arts House, Singapore.

All royalties from this book are donated to Ayo Indonesia and Yayasan Harapan Sumba (YHS), two not-for-profits organization Flores and Sumba respectively.

Ayo Indonesia focuses on various rural development activities, such as sustainable farming, drinking water supply construction, access roads through community self-help works, promoting Credit Unions, empowering people with disabilities, etc.

YHS works with very poor farming communities on the island of Sumba; addressing their needs for water, education, better health and sustainable livelihoods, and also help disabled children. YHS helps the communities understand and resolve their own problems through discussions, training and working together, with a minimum of ‘handouts’.

Review by J. Goulding ~ A brilliant description of Indonesia

I picked up "Journeys with the caterpillar" hoping to learn a few things about Indonesia, which is where one of my close friends was born. Before reading the book, I knew little about any of the Indonesian islands; now I feel pretty well informed about Flores and Sumba, and Indonesian culture in general.

The author Shivaji Das is funny; I laughed at his description of "fake Arab" dress to keep cool in Labuan Bajo, the self-proclaimed tour guide whose only English phrase is "I speak English", and several other passages in the book. Das's journey covers many interesting locales whose food, climate, landscape, architecture and people are brought to life by vivid descriptions. I particularly enjoyed reading about Ruteng in Western Flores, which Das describes as a "United Nations of human faces" with a Carioca-style culture. I was also fascinated by the photographs at the end of the book, which show the tribal villages of Indonesia that have yet to be touched by modernity.

I would recommend "Journeys with the caterpillar" to people who are interested in modern Indonesia for any reason, but especially to those who are considering a trip to the islands.

Shivaji's writings have been published in various magazines such as Time, Venture Mag, Hack Writers. He has also given several talks on the subject of Flores and Sumba in Singapore, China, Indonesia and Brazil where he was hosted by the Ambassador of Indonesia to Brazil.
JOURNEYS WITH THE CATERPILLAR is available on Amazon.

All proceeds go to Ayo Indonesia and YHS.