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The Best Women's Travel Writing 2009: True Stories from Around the World (Travelers' Tales)

by Faith Adiele

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242954,298 (2.9)1
This best-selling, award-winning series presents the finest accounts of women who have traveled to the ends of the earth to discover new places, peoples ? and themselves. The common threads connecting the stories are a woman's perspective and lively storytelling to make the reader laugh, cry, wish she were there, or be glad she wasn't. From breaking the gender barrier on a soccer field in Kenya to learning the art of French cooking in a damp cellar in the Loire Valley to hitchhiking through Mexico in the 1960s, the points of view and perspectives are global and the themes eclectic, includ… (more)
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i have now realized i really don't like travel writing. so of course i didn't enjoy this. this will be my last book like this. ( )
  mahallett | Oct 3, 2013 |
Average. Starts out well but fades as the last few stories are distinctly less interesting than the beginning. Was the editior runnign out of material?

More a collection of essays and fragments than a cohesive whole, this is a collection of writings from women who have travelled somewhere, at some stage in their lives. Not always recently, not always to distant places (although both are also represented). It is the fragments that seemed particularly dijointed and out of place. Sometimes chapters or parts of chapters from the author's other complete books, they lacked the background and introductions that describe the situation properly. There is also a very US centric focus. I think all the stories certainly the vast majority were about US based travellers. They may not have been born in the US, or they were, and now live abroad, but in whatever manner their cultural background is very american. This grates after a while. In many cases there is quite a stunning lack of cultural sensitivity to the way other people live their lives. Only sometimes do the suthors come to realise this.

Apart from this it is frequently quite interesting - especially so when the traveller comes to a part of the world that you've visited, or undergoes an experience you've encountered. Many of the situations are of course specific to women, but even so I feel there is a general interest in the tales given - not sufficient to seek out any of the authors' individual works - but the varies styles and situation mean that most readers will discover something to their taste, and of course some that they don't like.

The Ebook formatting was particularly poor - many runonwords which seems to be a frequent problem in ebooks, but also misplaced pictures, and poor text formatting around them. ( )
  reading_fox | May 23, 2011 |
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This best-selling, award-winning series presents the finest accounts of women who have traveled to the ends of the earth to discover new places, peoples ? and themselves. The common threads connecting the stories are a woman's perspective and lively storytelling to make the reader laugh, cry, wish she were there, or be glad she wasn't. From breaking the gender barrier on a soccer field in Kenya to learning the art of French cooking in a damp cellar in the Loire Valley to hitchhiking through Mexico in the 1960s, the points of view and perspectives are global and the themes eclectic, includ

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