Return to Home Page

October 21, 2007

The Best American Travel Writing 2007

batw2007.jpg

The latest volume in Houghton Mifflin’s annual Best American Travel Writing series came out this month, and as always it makes for great armchair travel reading. New Yorker writer Susan Orlean edited this year, and the anthology features stories from Peter Hessler, Ian Frazier, Elizabeth Gilbert, David Halberstam, George Saunders, and Gary Shteyngart. A World Hum story, Jason Anthony’s “A Brief and Awkward Tour of the End of the Earth,” leads off the collection, and I could have predicted the inclusion of Kevin Fedarko’s “High in Hell” and Ian Parker’s “Birth of a Nation?“, which I recall enjoying in Esquire and The New Yorker in 2006. Orlean seems to have favored stories from The New Yorker, Gourmet, GQ, and Outside — which account for over half of the selections.

The “Notable Travel Writing of 2006″ in the back of the tome reminds readers how deep the selections were this year, as stories by Tim Cahill, Pico Iyer, Sebastian Junger, David Sedaris, Alma Guillermoprieto, Anthony Lane, Michael Paterniti, Jeffrey Tayler, Patrick Symmes, and Mark Jenkins all made the list. Also on this short-list were stories by friends and colleagues like Jim Benning, Elisabeth Eaves, Tom Haines, Ayun Halliday, Wendy Knight, Matthew Polly, and Thomas Swick. My sister, Kristin Van Tassel, also landed a “notable” story with her New Orleans tale from World Hum, “The Places We Find Ourselves.”

I was honored to have a couple of stories on the “Notable Travel Writing” list this year: “India’s Isle of Ghosts,” from the San Francisco Chronicle, and “Cycladian Rhythm,” from Outside Traveler. This honor, combined with my Lowell Thomas Award earlier this month (a Bronze Award in Personal Comment for “The Living Museum of Nowhere and Everywhere,” from Lonely Planet’s Tales From Nowhere), has made it a gratifying month for me.

More information on The Best American Travel Writing 2007 here.

Posted by |  
Category: Readings from the book world, Rolf's News and Updates
Related Posts: The Best American Travel Writing 2004, Tantric sex, and my story in this year’s Best American Travel Writing, The Best American Travel Writing 2005


4 Responses to “The Best American Travel Writing 2007”

  1. Rainfield Says:

    the book looks great.
    i hope i can get one to help my trip to America.
    i got Lonely Planet though.

  2. Joel Carillet Says:

    Congrats, Rolf, and thanks for making sure we knew about the latest edition coming out.

    Keep up the good work/writing.

  3. Matthew Polly Says:

    Thanks for the shout out. It was nice to share the notable section with you. And kudos on your Lowell Thomas.

  4. Jen Leo Says:

    Stud.

Leave a Reply

Main

Bio

Stories

Essays

Interviews

Books

Images

Writers

Guide

News

Paris

Vagabonding.net

Contact

Marco Polo Didnt Go There
Rolf's new book!


Vagabonding
   Vagabonding


RECENT COMMENTS

Magdalena: I post pictures on Facebook while I’m travelling. It’s nice to...

Renato Losio: You are almost tempting me to join Facebook. Almost.

Barry: Definitely a must have list! I also found a place where you can download these...

conchi: Bonita, te escribo en español para expresarme mejor. Los últimos días,...

Marcel Janus: The Glacier Express in Switzerland is great! Take the ride if...

Jeff Paulett: Don’t you have the American Orient-Express?

Abha: Mohammad, Anish, JA, and Amanda: Thanks for your thoughts, I really appreciate...

Amanda: Abha, you poor gal, sounds like a nasty case of reverse culture shock and I...

J A: alfds! Please don’t make outrageously ignorant posts. It wastes our time....

friend of another carnival cruiser: Hey Mick, You are the fool if you paid for Desmonds...

SPONSORED BY :



CATEGORIES

TRAVEL LINKS

ARCHIVES

RECENT ENTRIES

Alternatives to Bangkok as an SE Asia gateway
Using Facebook for your travels
Holiday gift ideas for the traveler
Spectacular train trips around the world
Handling the transition: Numb and lost
Spare Change
Wanderlust is not a curable disease
The healing power of nature
Website for weekend trips
Looking for the adventures that travel agencies don’t know about


Subscribe to this blog's feed
Counter