The pandemic has rendered us strangely land-locked and confined, luggage covered in cobwebs with passports gathering dust in a drawer somewhere. Wishing to be anywhere but here with nowhere out. But, for the bibliophile, writes Radhika Dossa, there exists a secret doorway to the world: that inside a travel book.
Curl up in a quiet corner with a good book and you are sure to be in another world. And whilst all stories, stories of women at large, discovering themselves and the world, make for fascinating journeys. The insatiable appetite for foreign lands and alien food has driven many ladies to explore the world, discover new cultures and themselves, long before Elizabeth Gilbert wrote about food, prayer and love.
To Thailand and back - again
As autobiographies go, Kay Plunkett-Hogge’s Adventures of a Terribly Greedy Girl documents her life in Thailand and later in the West with tongue-in-cheek hilarity. Describing herself as a Thai soul born in a white-skinned, rosy cheeked body, Plunkett-Hogge is a now a food writer with a cooking school in Chiang Rai. Her stories, deliciously wicked and funny will leave you wanting to savour every book she has written. Her tales of Bangkok growing up and her many careers before the kitchen are witty, with her very English sense of humour shining through.
Adventures of an Englishwoman in China
Acclaimed cookbook writer Fuchsia Dunlop was a journalist in Hong Kong when she discovered and fell in love with Mainland China. She moved to Chengdu University on a scholarship and trained as a Chinese chef alongside. Her memoir, Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper: A Sweet-Sour Memoir of Eating in China is a thrilling account of her trips to China exploring all things Sichuan, with special focus on its cuisine. In her pursuit for tasting China, she has traveled paths unknown in search of culinary delights and horrors including bear’s paw, grasshoppers and her beloved Sichuan peppers.
Cambodia on a plate
Natacha du Pont de Bie, predating social media, backpacked across remote Laos for a year, searching for historical recipes in a culture only just opened to visitors after years of post-colonial isolation. Having found the only existing copy of a royal Cambodian chef’s recipes penned before the rebellion, Natacha was determined to track down and compile a real Cambodian cookbook, something that did not exist until then. Her travelogue, Ant Egg Soup is filled with her adventures and many tasty recipes, as she backpacked her way across the remote countryside making friends and learning to cook their cuisine.
Paris, je t’aime
Eloise Lane is a bestselling American romance novelist who moved her family to Paris for an year. Her tryst with the most romantic city in the world inspired her to write a year-long love letter to the city. Her memoir, Paris in Love is poignantly written and deeply personal. She speaks of the people and little things she discovers as she walks her children to school each day, dropping lots of tantalizing breadcrumbs for one to follow and explore the city post pandemic. You long to nibble on a freshly baked pain au chocolat while you yearn for the streets of the Marais, as the rain gently falls over the City of Love.
Italia, amore mio
One fine day, renowned author Jhumpa Lahiri decided she had to learn Italian fluently enough to be able to write books in it. Following her epiphany and obsession, she moved her family to Rome and began to study, read, write and think in Italiano. “In Other Words”( translation) is her first attempt at writing in her new tongues, giving us a glimpse into her world. Her latest, “Whereabouts” also translated from the Italian, a compilation of vignettes about Italy, is part fiction but wholly magical and evocative of the land she cherishes. If you love postcards and Italy, this book is your favourite holiday in words.
Iran for tadig and true love
Jennifer Klinec’s The Temporary Bride, is about her real-life romance in an extremely orthodox nation. In search of lessons in authentic Iranian cuisine, Jennifer inveigles her way into her host family’s kitchen, meeting their son Vahid whom she falls passionately in love with. What follows is a tale of forbidden love and cultural divides before true love manages to escape to freedom in the West. Now married and having survived the challenges of their taboo relationship, the couple are settled in the U.K. Read this to have a deeper understanding of Iranian culture, customs and food, if not for the sheer grit and determination that brought this unlikely couple together.
Wandering the world
The doyenne of the Italian travelogue, Frances Mayes wrote her most lyrical, vivid book, A Year in the World traversing some of the most stunning parts of Spain, France, Portugal and Italy. Wandering historic cities, fabled gardens, tiny villages and old markets, this book should be revered as the most evocative travel journal ever written. Her latest, See You in the Piazza is the stuff of la dolce vita road trips: driving around Italy with no fixed agenda, eating at little enotecas, staying in a locanda, and discovering towns off the tourist map.
Driving the dream in America
While driving abroad may seem intimidating to many, Layne Mosler left North America to explore the world becoming the cult blogger, Taxi Gourmet. Mosler started out asking local taxi drivers for their favourite places to eat in Argentina and Berlin, and ended up becoming one herself in New York City. Her memoir, Driving Hungry will leave you with an appetite for tango, steak and romance.
What a wonderful world
Phenomenal, by Leigh Ann Henion, documents her search for natural phenomenon. Reeling from childbirth, Henion is on a spiritual quest to rekindle her sense of wonder, a trip that takes her to far flung destinations across the globe. Henion experiences the Northern Lights, the great migration, bioluminescence, and more on her journey to self-discovery.
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