Overland: Traveling with No Plan by Richard Kaufmann
4 stars
Overland is a non-fiction travelogue. First written in German, it has now been successfully translated into English.
Set out in easy to read chapters with some wonderful colour illustrations, the book begins by questioning our human need for travel: what it means to be a tourist versus a traveller. The author poses a theory about a holiday being a search for some peace; a place to unwind from life’s stresses. He then considers how that peace is obtained. Is it the final destination? Or is it the complete journey with all its experiences? It’s easy to buy into the travel agent’s image of a destination and its promises, but how many of us are disappointed when our perfectly imagined holiday lets us down? Could we look at travel in a different light?
These musings are interspersed with author Richard Kaufmann’s travels, mainly via train, around Europe and parts of Asia. I really liked the author’s arguments against excessive air travel and how those carbon footprints add up, while his observations about people, culture and places were insightful. He certainly opened my eyes to make me look at my own methods of travel in the past and how I might change them in the future.
There’s also a map which lists popular and lesser-known destinations in Europe. It starts in Brussels, the author explaining that it is a good starting point for many Europeans. The map shows distances and train travel times, with some suggested prices. Some of those prices were surprisingly cheap (I know prices fluctuate) but it gives the train a new appeal.
If you are thinking of travelling again but want to do things differently, then think about the train and let it take the strain (as they say!).
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Richard Kaufmann once travelled to Morocco, unintentionally with no money, simply because he had set off without any kind of plan. It changed him, and the way he travelled in future. Here, he shares his stories and vision for how we can all holiday in comfort, without wrecking the environment. And we don’t have to take especially long, or go particularly far. We find the most beautiful destinations when we travel overland. Normally we never see them, because we fly right over them.
224 pages on traveling Europe, Morocco and Iran by train & coach. Paperback plus map of train routes in Europe. With a foreword by Tom Hodgkinson (EN version) .
English version available to buy here
German version available to buy here
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This book sounds really interesting, Rosie.
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Thanks Liz, it has some lovely illustrations.
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I have a soft spot for trains, Rosie, and I’ve had some pretty interesting conversations during train journeys, although depending on the time of the year and the route, it can work out very expensive, but the book sounds great. Thanks for sharing it!
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You are the great traveller Olga, the one who enjoys the journey as much as the destination.
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I love traveling by train, but only in the UK or Europe. Train travel here is more tiring and challenging than a plane flight.
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Oh that interesting Noelle, is it because they tend to go to main cities and getting to a small destination then requires a different transport?
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True about going to main cities, but it’s also expensive and the trains often stop for long periods of time to let freight trains through because the tracks are owned by the freight companies. I so enjoyed the trains in Ireland!
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I love riding on trains, especially in Europe where they are more reliable than here in the states! Sounds like a wonderful book.
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Second person to say that trains in the US are disliked. I am surprised that they are unreliable.
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For disabled people, getting there quickly and getting the travel part over can be a necessity – wandering about, dealing with unexpected things, places, people, circumstances, and surfaces are all harder for those with energy and mobility impairments. I’d love to – but it is unrealistic for me.
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Disabled travel does sound like a challenge, so much of the world is not set up with enough facilities.
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May I recommend https://liebjabberings.wordpress.com/2021/10/23/traveling-with-a-nonstandard-mobility-device/ ? It’ll give you the flavor of my latest encounter with travel.
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AHhh….traveling….My husband and I used to travel every year, but ever since the pandemic, we’ve not made any travel/vacation plans. Hopefully soon, but this time, it’ll take on a whole different meaning now that our family has grown. We used to enjoy our stops in-between, but now, if we do start vacationing/traveling again, it’ll be more about getting to our next destination quickly and safely! Great post, Rosie!
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Travelling with children can be its own challenge, we took our nine month old to New Zealand for a month years ago. It was exhausting.
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Omg yes. It’s crazy. We took a trip back to Malaysia with our two little ones before the pandemic, oh my…it was just crazy 😅
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