For 30 years I’ve had chapters in my ETBD guidebook about hitching and camping. Do any of you still do that? Should I just drop both chapters?
The first guidebook I ever wrote was Europe Through the Back Door. For 30 editions since 1980 it’s evolved, but I’ve realized that travel in the 21st century doesn’t always fit a 20th-century template. Now I’m considering reinventing entire parts of the book rather than just updating it, and who best to help me with this task than my travel-savvy Blog fans?
For the next week or so, I’d like to tap into your cumulative travel wisdom as my Blog “road scholars.” I love the notion that we’re all in the same “Travelers’ School of Hard Knocks,” so every day I’ll be seeking your travel advice. Let’s compare notes to make the best travel-skills handbook possible together.
Today, I’d love to poll you for general comments on the book (more specific questions will come later). For example: Has anyone read all of ETBD? What was most helpful? What did you want to see more of? What did you want to see less of? Are there new concerns for travelers that it doesn’t address? How can we improve ETBD for our travelers? Anything else?
Much to my delight, today on Ron Paul’s own blog he featured me and my Iran program. When the special was first released, I worked pretty hard to bring it to the attention of DC politicians, thinking investing an hour to get a primer on Iranian society would be time well spent—especially considering how little decision-makers in our country actually know about Iran. But until now, no one responded.
Though I don’t support all that he stands for, I guess it shouldn’t surprise me—given his take on militarism, trade policy, and our war on drugs—that our program would resonate with Ron Paul. On his blog today, he wrote, “There’s a quote attributed to Mark Twain that goes like this: ‘Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.’ In this lecture Rick Steves proves that he is more than a travel writer. He has had the courage to vindicate Twain’s statement. He has very much proven himself to be a true patriot and gentleman.”
Thanks Dr. Paul. I can see why you have such an enthusiastic following.