Complete National Parks of the United States

February 3, 2011
I purchased another book with my Christmas gift card in addition to Bill Bryson's African Diary. And just like it, I had also seen this one on the shelf at the book store several months ago. I passed on buying National Geographic's Complete National Parks of the United States at that time because it is more of a desk reference book, opposed to a guide I'd carry along with me on a hike. I'm glad I picked it up now, though, because it is one heck of a desk reference.

I have not yet read Complete National Parks of the United States cover-to-cover. It honestly seems rather silly to do so. That would be like reading the encyclopedia from front to back. Sure, it can be entertaining and educational, but it's not meant for that purpose. Instead, it is meant to be consulted when planning a trip that will include national parks, monuments, historic sites, trails and other places managed by the National Park Service.

So, instead of reading this all the way through, I read the entries for the national parks I have visited or will be seeing in the very near future. I found them all to be very well written with a history of each park, some suggestions on what to see, and where to go or who to call for more information. And many of the entries include the great photography you'd expect from National Geographic, as well as maps and other reference material.

If I have one complaint, it'd be the organization of Complete National Parks of the United States. It is smartly organized by region and then by state, although I have already found this to be a little frustrating. While the format does make sense, I would have preferred it be alphabetical by state. Based on the way it is now, I have to thumb through the book, or check the table of contents, in order to first find the region and then the state I need, instead of just going straight to the state based on how it would be found alphabetically.

This is a minor speed bump and one that I'm sure I'll quickly get over. And as I begin to plan more trips to see the national parks of the United States, this will be my first reference point. Because of its bulk and hardcover nature, though, it will not be the book I carry with me on a hike. I'll still reserve that for National Geographic's other national parks book. This will instead find itself on the shelf, like The National Parks: America's Best Idea, as a source for information and planning before I head out on my next adventure.
 

Bill Bryson's African Diary

January 31, 2011
Several months ago, maybe even a year, I saw Bill Bryson's African Diary on the shelf at the bookstore. I had wanted to read it for some time simply because Bill Bryson wrote it. I love his work and this was one of the outstanding books of his I had yet to read. Well, when I saw it on the shelf, I passed on purchasing it - the book was too skinny at only fifty pages for the price. I wanted something more for my dollar and decided to go another route. But, when I was given a gift card for Ch...

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Kingdom of Ten Thousand Things

January 10, 2011
Kingdom of Ten Thousand Things: An Impossible Journey from Kabul to Chiapas by Gary Geddes was the last of three books I read over the Christmas break. I went on a reading binge over the break in an attempt to clear off my "to do" bookshelf a bit. And this one had been sitting on the shelf for a while; I've had it for so long that I don't even remember where I picked it up, possibly having received it from the publisher.

Geddes writes about his own journey retracing the footsteps of Bu...

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The Heart of the World

January 6, 2011
I was capitvated with this book the moment I saw the cover on a book stand at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. I was nearing the completion of another book, so I picked it up and threw it in my pack to read as soon as I returned to Denver. And then Ian Baker's The Heart of the World: A Journey to Tibet's Lost Paradise sat on my home bookshelf for a couple of years for a reason I can't really explain. I picked it up a couple of weeks ago, at the start of my Christmas break, an...

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A Course Called Ireland

January 3, 2011
I had plenty of time to read with a week off for a holiday break. I definitely kept busy running around doing various family things, but was able to easily find time to read around the madness that encompassed my time off. One of the books I read, A Course Called Ireland: A Long Walk in Search of a Country, a Pint, and the Next Tee by Tom Coyne, was recommended to me by a friend over a couple of pints at the pub one night. Since high school I haven't been much of a golfer, but he assured me...

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With the Kama Sutra Under My Arm

December 13, 2010
It was a lazy weekend that I largely spent reading. Sure, I watched a bit of football and hung out with friends, but I was also almost able to read a book cover-to-cover in one sitting. I say almost, since I was already a few chapters in when I picked it up Sunday evening. It was a great way to end the weekend, reading With the Kama Sutra Under My Arm: My Madcap Misadventures Across India by Trisha Bernard (originally subtitled An Indian Journey).

I flipped through With the Kama Sutr...

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Lizards on the Mantel, Burros at the Door

December 9, 2010
I had to do a lot of preparatory research before writing my book, The Drive North: A Swing Down Memory Lane. A lot of it was rather tedious and boring historical reading, something I thought I was over when I graduated from college, but there was an occasional gem that I really enjoyed. One of the books that helped me along the way was Lizards on the Mantel, Burros at the Door: A Big Bend Memoir by Etta Koch with June Cooper Price.

Etta Koch moved her family to the newly created Big Bend...

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The Drive North: A Swing Down Memory Lane

December 7, 2010
All of my present-day travels across the globe are grounded in those which I experienced with my family as a child. We drove everywhere - with the exception of one trip, if memory serves correctly - and it was always in the big, gray conversion van we nicknamed The Beast. I'm almost positive it ticked over 500,000 miles before my father sold it, and later found it abandoned, dead, alongside the road one afternoon. Well, to be upfront, I've been a bit homesick for those trips of late. I've t...

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The Best American Travel Writing of 2010

November 23, 2010
I'm getting more time to read as the months get colder. I'm going out for fewer hikes, as well as other things, and staying in more to curl up in a blanket on the couch and read. At times I'm even reading three or four books at a time, maybe one more than I usually do, and get getting through them faster than before. One such book that I zipped through was The Best American Travel Writing of 2010 - a collection of, well, the best American travel writing over the past year.

I loved readin...

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Sailing Alone Around the World

November 18, 2010
I tend to find myself in a bookstore for a randomly justified reason. I really have no good reason to head in, as though I'm out of books to read, but I somehow make up a reason and go in there and buy something I don't really need. I did this a few months ago and picked up, among other things, Joshua Slocum's Sailing Alone Around the World. And honestly, I'm not even totally sure why I bought it since I'm not exactly interested in sailing.

Like many books tend to do after I buy them, Sa...

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