February 01, 2003
Dave Eggers on isolation
"But dropping out of touch is still possible. It's so easy. It doesn't take long, just about anywhere, to get away from phones, etc. Five miles outside of any city, usually. In Iceland, which is a prosperous country, a lot of the roads get really sketchy just outside of Reykjavik, and there's still only one road through the interior of the island, and when you're out there it's about 13 hours of insanely rough and winding driving without any sign of life -- you're out of touch. You go through landscapes that could be Hawaii, then Arizona, then Arctic tundra, then Scotland, and there isn't a gas station for maybe 400 miles. Don't ever believe anyone who says that the world's been explored, there's nothing left to see, all that. I mean, have you driven through Wyoming? Wyoming just makes you weep. We're so lucky to have it, all of it."
--Dave Eggers, from an August 2002 New Yorker interview
In "Blue Highways", William Least Heat-Moon gives a tableau from an american tavern: man complains there's nowhere pure & untouristed anymore (this in the late 70s), woman needles him & says he would tread over any untouched place for bragging rights; man takes woman out of the bar.
In "Baptism of Solitude" by Paul Bowles, he writes of the intense silence (?oxymoron?) of the Sahara, unlike any other. Tomorrow I go to Morocco to find out.
Will order your book when I get back--do you have a stop planned for Boston? Thousands of students, plenty of bookstores, and a half-dozen monolithic tour operators with plenty of travelling employees (I'm one).
Posted by: Elizabeth Briel on February 2, 2003 07:31 AMI can relate to his Wyoming reference. That state moves me unlike most others I've been through. Did you get to meet him in SF?
Posted by: Jen on February 3, 2003 08:29 AMI'd love to do a Boston tour-stop, but we had a limited schedule this time. New York will be as close as I get to Boston on the book tour. But I sincerely hope to get up there for my next book!
Posted by: Rolf on February 3, 2003 02:03 PMBook Release and Tour Diary
Catching up with my magazine reading
Essays
Feedback
From the international affairs quote-file
From the Paris writing workshop
Readings from Around the 'Net
Readings from the book world
Relics from the road
Rolf's News and Updates
Travel Advice
Travel Quote of the Day
Writings by my nephew Cedar, who is 4
The Tragedy of Fernando and Rosita: A lesson in story structure
Stanley Stewart on what makes good travel writing
A few notes on Third World urban slums
Pico Iyer on the merits of shoestring travel
More feedback from Vagabonding readers
As good a reason as any for not postponing your travels
Goodbye, Wichita
Roger Sandall on the delusions of 'romantic primitivism'
The joys of an open-ended journey
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