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Packing for a travel - which books should I take
Hi everyone,

I am about to embark on a short trip to Europe. Work related issues. Usually when I pack I take with me around 5 books in hope to read some of them. Today it occurred to me that I usually pick similar books in all my trips. That is, I usually pick some novels, short if possible, that will be easy to read in the airplane or late at night. Today, for no apparent reason I picked different books. My choice is a short book about some of Nietzsche's work, a book by Joseph Stiglitz, and the 3 usual novels: one by Paul Auster, short stories by Elsa Morante and America by Sontag. The question is why did I pick those books. I certainly want to read all of them but I am probably fooling myself with some of them. Will I have the energy and patience to read America? Will Stiglitz be too boring? Will I survive another Auster book? Nietzsche?

I think that I usually pick "easy" books as traveling is too overwhelming. It is not that I go to new exciting places (unless Bethesda is exciting), but still being outside home is always some sort of a challenge. This time I think that I am ready for heavier books because I go to a nice place that I know. So there will not be the feeling of landing in a new and boring place but rather of coming to a friendly place where I've been before and where there are many fun things to do. It is quite funny, tomorrow I will be in one of the most exciting cities in the world but somehow I think of it as a place that I can feel very relaxed in (this of course may change tomorrow...). Maybe that's why I'm ready for different books, I am going to a place in which I will not have to confront the outside too much, but rather live happily side by side with it.

So, there isn't much of a question in this post but rather thinking outloud. But let's make one. Which books do you usually take on a trip and why?

p.s. I also have a poem book of Szymborska, in case I have a few dead minutes.
Charles, like you I tend to be a novel-reader when I'm travelling - at least, during the actual act of travelling. I often bring along a book of poetry, but save it for when I'm alone in the evenings and physically grounded. I don't find movement conducive to reading poetry. For me, it's something to be savoured in stillness and solitude, a little at a time, whereas when I'm on the move, I prefer the forward trajectory of narrative prose... so I suppose the type of book I favour corresponds to my physical state of motion or rest. I'd never thought about it that way before, but there you are!

Several years ago I spent a year in France teaching English. I had a lot of free time, and train tickets were cheap, so I spent a great part of my time exploring different regions of the country. I got into the habit of taking with me a book set in whichever region I was visiting (Le Rouge et Le Noir for Alsace, Lettres de mon moulin and L'Eau des collines for Provence, Le Grand Meaulnes for the Loire Valley, far too many to list for Paris), which I've retained every time I visit a new country. Indeed, I've been introduced to several of what are now my favourite writers that way - Cees Nooteboom (Netherlands), Jose Saramago (Portugal), Bernardo Atxaga and Javier Marias (Spain).

I don't think I've ever taken as many as five books with me on a trip, though (although it's quite a common occurrence for me to come back with well more than that number). I usually take one book of poetry and one good, thick novel (most recently it was Bel-Ami) to get me started, and - especially if I'm travelling in an anglophone or francophone country - just trust to chance to find something interesting along the way if and when I finish the books I started with.
Books Discussed
Bel-Ami (Oxford World's Classics)
by Guy de Maupassant
Daudet: Lettres de Mon Moulin (French Edition)
by Alphonse Daudet
Le rouge et le noir
by Stendhal
L'Eau des Collines (Jean de Florette et Manon des Sources), 2 volumes
by Marcel Pagnol
All Souls Day
by Cees Nooteboom
Baltasar and Blimunda
by Jose Saramago; Giovanni Pontiero
Obabakoak
by Bernardo Atxaga
A Heart So White
by Javier Marias

Hi Misia,

I like your comparison of physical movement and the advance of the storyline. Didn't think about it in those terms before.

It sounds like a good idea to take a book related to the region of travel, but I assume that it is more suited for travels in which you actually have time to explore the area. Most of my trips are confined to a (non interesting) city and I do not have time to actually travel around. The reason that I take many books with me is that I never know which mood I will have and which book will better fit it so I try to cover all options :) For example, in the trip that I discussed above I had so many things to see around that I did not finish reading any of the books that I took. I did read parts of America and from Stiglitz's book but did not finish them yet. Now it is a race against time - will I fight my hectic life and manage to finish reading the books before I forget about them...

B.t.w., the one book that I did manage to read is the poetry book. It was easier reading a few poems wen I did have some time.

I wonder what is it exactly that make me prefer one unread book to another when I'm on a trip. Maybe it is the "movement". Not just the trajectory of the narrative prose as you put it but rather a book that is less static. Where the story actually moves. A few "trip books" that I did finish reading were The Road by Cormac McCarthy, Guns Gems and Steele by Diamond, The bible Unearthed by Finkelstien and Silberman, Solaris by Lem, several Fandorin books by Akunin and several books of Murakami (there are also many others that I can't recall now). Not all of them are "physically moving" though several are, but in all of them there is a very strong sense of movement so I assume that this is the certain je ne sais quoi that good travel books have.

Thanks, I think that I did understand something new.

It is now interesting, for me, to understand what in a book makes us feel the movement. It seems very difficult to define as it probably depends on the talent of the specific author, but do you think that there is such common thing? For example in the books that I listed above there is a movement in space - between countries and inside a country, a movement in time both to the past and to the future and in some of them a sense of a chase. These are all obvious movements but do you think that there are other, more delicate, ways in which a novel causes a feeling of movement that can be classified?
Books Discussed
The Road (Oprah's Book Club)
by Cormac McCarthy
Kafka on the Shore
by Haruki Murakami
Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
by Jared Diamond
Solaris
by Stanislaw Lem
The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts
by Neil Asher Silberman; Israel Finkelstein
Azazel
by Akunin Boris.

Another suggestion (rather than an answer) is to get an amazon kindle, which takes away the packing/size issue, and lets you have the choice of loads of favs. This is not a commission jobby, I just think they are a great invention.
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Latest Post: February 20, 2010 at 4:55 PM
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