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What would you read on a desert island? (baxterclaus)

Your ideal desert island books


Rating: (13 votes)
rateraterateraterate

5th April 2011

Wanderlust readers would certainly relish being trapped on a remote desert island. But if you could, what books would you choose to take with you?

Here I have selected my ultimate desert island books; a list that would keep me content until my eventual rescue. I'm going to invite you to join in as well - have your say in the comments section and tell me what your selection would be (bonus points for anyone who picks one of these books).

In a reverse of the original radio format I will also let you choose one song as well as the usual luxury item. As well as offering your own selection please do feel free to cast your opinion on my taste: genius or woefully misguided..?

The Worst Journey in the World, Apsley Cherry-Garrard Not only beautiful writing and a vital documentary on Scott's last expedition, but also the call to arms that prodded me to get on with my own South Pole expedition.

As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning, Laurie Lee My favourite travel book. I love the lyrical writing, the freedom, the endless possibilities of the open road. (This would be my choice if I was only allowed a single book).

The Ascent of Rum Doodle A farcical, comic account of the fabled Mount Rum Doodle. Helps remind me not to take my expeditions, nor writing about them, too seriously.

The Kon-Tiki Expedition, Thor Heyerdhal Sail across the Pacific? On a balsa wood raft? Using only equipment available to mankind tens of thousands of years ago? Sure - why not?! Gung-ho adventure by an anthropologist seeking to prove a serious point.

Wind, Sand and Stars, Antoine St Exupery The book I wish I had written. The beauty of the desert and the night sky as witnessed by an early pilot.

The Way of the World, Nicolas Bouvier Two young men drive East, in search of Asia, the wonders of the world, wine, women and song. When I am old this book will remind me of my glory days.

Full Tilt, Dervla Murphy Almost all books about long bicycle journeys are very boring. This one inspired me to think big with my journeys.

Sailing Alone Around the World, Joshua Slocum The first man to sail single-handedly around the world. I love his spirit as well as the freedom he finds out at sea.

For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway It's not really about travel. But it is about Spain. So that's enough for me to shoe-horn my favourite novel into this list. It's about life and living, love, death, and being a man.

And as for my favourite piece of music... St Matthew Passion by Bach

And my luxury Item: a Bialetti espresso maker

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Comments

7 comments
  • 6th April by Lyn Hughes

    Oooh, what a list. Worst Journey and As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning would def be on my list. Full Tilt probably would be too. Shamefully, I haven't yet read Wind, Sand and Stars - note to self to rectify. Arabian Sands would have to be on there for me. Am struggling on just one piece of music, oh dear!


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  • 6th April by louiseheal

    Hmm...Hard! I'll go for:



    As I Walked out one Midsummer Morning (Laurie Lee)

    A Moveable Feast (Hemingway)

    The Marsh Arabs (Thesiger)

    On a Shoestring to Coorg (Dervla Murphy)

    Behind the Wall (Colin Thubron)

    On The Road (Kerouac)

    In Patagonia (Chatwin)

    The Places In Between (Rory Stewart)

    Travels with Myself and Another (Martha Gellhorn)



    Music: er...can I have an extra book instead? Or an audio book?



    Luxury Item: Notebooks and writing material


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  • 7th April by Sergeant_Pluck

    Good Heavens, where do I start!



    1. Wind, Sand and Stars (or indeed anything by Saint-Ex) is an absolute masterpiece.



    2. For Whom the Bell Tools - ditto. Completely overcooked re: Manhood, but a true hymn to Spain, agreed.



    3. Naples '44. Norman Lewis. The funniest yet most deadpan, most tragi-comic travel/memoir/war thing Lewis ever wrote. One of my top books, EVER!



    4. Hotel Honolulu - Paul Theroux. What else for the beach? Another tragic-comic masterpiece about a middle-aged failed writer who ends up running a hotel for the irresponsible playboy owner. One novel that Theroux 'nailed'.



    5. The Last Days of the Incas - Kim McQuarrie. Updated and replaced, in my opinion, the classic 'Conquest of the Incas' by John Hemming. The new definitive history of the Incas, it reads like a  thriller.



    6. Angry White Pyjamas - Robert Twigger. Twigger - adventurer, naturalist and all round good egg, spends a year learning Aikido with the Tokyo Riot Police. The result is a humourous (and painful) observation on modern Japan.



    7. Journey Without Maps - Graham Greene. Greene's account of overlanding through Liberia. Can't think of a better writer to spend time with here.



    8. Giant Steps - Karl Bushby. About 10 years ago, Busby decided to walk around the world, starting in Punta Arenas....and he's still out there - stuck (bureaucracy) somewhere in Russia I believe. Giant Steps is an account of the first third of so of his journey. Check it out online - the Goliath Expedition.



    9. The Zanzibar Chest - Aiden Hartley. A travel/family memoir in Southern Africa and the Middle East, evoking memories not only of Thesinger, but just about every explorer since.



    10. Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know - Ranulph Fiennes's autobiography. What's not to like!



    Music: Chambao (Sapnish flamenco/dance fusion)



    Luxury: Iphone (with solar charger!)


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  • 7th April by Alastair Humphreys

    wow - I'm impressed how many Wanderlust readers know As I Walked Out. I thought it was quite obscure! Clearly you have good taste...



    I love the theory of Arabian Sands but get a bit bogged down in it at times.



    I love Norman Lewis too.



    I "overtook" Karl Bushby in Alaska as I was cycling round the world. He is still going. Full marks for obdurate-ness.


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  • 10th April by Rolling Stone

    Kapuscinski; I would take all of his books :) The best travel writing you can find. But if I had to choose just one book, it would possibly be 'Travels with Herodotus'... Or maybe 'Imperium'? Or 'Heban'? Hm, difficult...


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  • 11th April by ElliFry

    How many have I got to choose? Too few!



    I think mine would be:



    1: The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts Louis DeBernieres.

    (If I could, I would add the two sequels too!) Magical realism based in a ficticious, but just right south american state.



    2: The Travels of Marco Polo

    Although disputed, and some of it evidently dubious, some parts of this are obviously true. And the accounts of the people he meets along the way make me wish I had been there too.



    3: 100 Years of Solitude Gabriel Garcia Marquez



    4: To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee



    5: Cider with Rosie Laurie Lee

    Reminds me of growing up in the Gloucestershire countryside. (Embarassed to admit I have not read As I walked out.... it's now on The List!)



    6: If This is a Man/The Truce Primo Levi

    The true story of the author's survival of Auschwitz, and his return journey to Italy.



    7: I agree on Travels with Myself and Another Martha Gellhorn



    8: The Granta Book of Reportage

    A collection of journalism from all over the world. I read it when I was about 11, and I blame it for my fascination with other countries.



    9: London Edward Rutherford



    10: Things Fall Apart Chinua Achebe



    Music: Mozart Requiem



    Luxury Item: A Toaster. I really miss toast when I travel!



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  • 8th June by Kavey

    Yes yes yes to ElliFry's The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts, and the 2 sequels. I didn't love Captain Corelli's Mandolin, though I did persevere longer than I would normally have, because of friends' recommendations, and it did improve a couple of hundred pages in... but those three books of his, I loved!



    I can't think for the rest.



    Maybe Swiss Family Robinson, which I loved as a child, but then again I've not read it since so might be dreadfully disappointed, more than 30 years later!


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