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27th April 2008

Tips for travelling readers

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Categories : Travel, books |

Ever become aware of a stupid habit you have when someone mentions it in themselves? This happened to me this morning in church where Mark mentioned the habit he has of packing far too many books whenever he goes travelling, even if it’s just for the weekend. I too am seriously guilty of this – I pack 4 or 5 books in my suitcase if I’m going away, only to get maybe one or two of them read.

But what’s worse, no matter where I am, I’m always drawn to look in bookshops and wind up bringing back several more books in addition to the ones I took with me. The last 3 times I visited Uganda I brought back at least 4 or 5 books each time (with the justification that ‘you just can’t buy these books back home’) – one of which was a massive 3kg textbook that I ended up having to pack in my luggage the other 3/4 of the way around the world through another 3 countries! Crazy. I can see one attraction of Cambodia (where ob1 was) perhaps being that there is less likely to be a big English language press there and hence less books to tempt me.

The other stupid thing I do is that I am too ambitious in my choice of reading material for travelling. Rather than picking something quick and light, I have a tendency towards choosing books of serious literary or theological cred, only to find that airplanes, airports and even hotels (especially when the kids are around) are not the best settings to try and tackle these sort of tomes.

So, my take home lessons for travelling readers (or reading travellers) are :

  1. Choose fairly easy to read, (relatively) lightweight books.
  2. Only take 1 or 2 books maximum. If you run out, you can always buy more along the way.
  3. If you’re like me, factor in the fact that you almost certainly will acquire more books in your travels, and accordingly allow room in your luggage for that eventuality.
  4. Guidebooks can be useful but I’ve found photocopying the relevant sections to be worthwhile. If you know you are only going to be in a couple of cities in a country, then copy those pages and leave the other 90% of the book at home. That way when you move on from that country you can simply leave your photocopied pages in the rubbish.
  5. Taking novels set in the country you are visiting is a good way to prepare yourself for your visit, and might also lead you to reading some books you might otherwise have not considered (for example I’ve read a few excellent novels set in Uganda that I probably would never have read otherwise)
  6. Consider books in digital format…. I haven’t done this travelling but a few years back I went through a phase of reading PDF books on my Palm Pilot whilst doing long quiet ICU shifts. I read the entire Dune and Wheel of Time series in that way.  Great for saving luggage space but for me this idea has one huge drawback – it violates my whole “books as furniture” principle – just like I prefer a physical copy of my music rather than a purely digital one, I like having books to hold and put on a shelf. There’s just something about holding a book in your hands and turning those pages that a digital reader can’t replicate. This is perhaps why, although I have 19 different bible versions on my PDA phone, I still do virtually all of my Bible reading in physical Bibles (preferably leather ones that sit nicely on my lap but I’m getting way off topic now…)

Anyway if anyone have any other tips they want to add to the list I’d love to hear them. All this talk, and following ob1’s blog of his travels over the last week has got me a bit “travel sick” (I doubt that’s the correct term but I’m using it in the sense of the opposite of “homesickness” wherein I’m actually seriously missing being in airports and on planes and in strange countries – Jen would say I’m crazy). I’ve got no plans to go back to Uganda this year, since we have a newborn baby and wouldn’t want to leave Jen and 3 kids for 3 weeks or so – plus I haven’t heard at all from them if they are actually doing a Watoto medical team this year.. but if another opportunity was to present itself for I’d be seriously tempted to jump at it…

There are currently 6 responses to “Tips for travelling readers”

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  1. 1 On April 28th, 2008, benjamin said:

    Great tips!

    One more could be that you should try and judge your book size to the length of time you want to be reading. While we were in Melbourne on our honeymoon we took books out to cafes and read for a lot of the time, and one day I took Hemingway’s ‘Old Man and the Sea’ out with us, and I completed it far before the time we had alloted for reading was up. I guess that’s what I get for choosing a novella.

    Not that big a deal I guess. Just a thought.

  2. 2 On April 28th, 2008, baggas said:

    Good point. I’ve made the opposite error many times – taking something way too big for the length/busyness of the trip. One time I took The Brothers Karamazov, which I didn’t finish until a couple of weeks after my return. On our round the world trip I packed Ulysses by James Joyce – a big fat book that sat in my suitcase the whole way round and then returned, unread, to it’s place on the shelf at home, where it remains to this day. Size and content are important considerations.

  3. 3 On April 29th, 2008, Iris said:

    Depends on where you travel to. I once had not enough books with me and ended up in a world of Spanish books only.
    I do speak a wee bit French but sure no Spanish at all…

  4. 4 On April 30th, 2008, Matthew said:

    I recently tried a new tact to my holiday reading, and packed both a new, decent size fiction book, along with a non-fiction book, to provide some contrast.
    Perhaps the fact that my non-fiction book was loosely work based helped a little, however it was nice to change from genre at whim.

  5. 5 On May 1st, 2008, baggas said:

    Hey Matthew good to hear from you! How’s life in the UK?

    I always try to follow your plan of having a mixture of genres to take along. But for me the work-based thing does not help at all – the minute I read anything remotely medical it becomes a huge struggle to get through it. I’ve long ago reached my saturation point with medical texts and still can’t find them at all interesting (except a couple of the African ones I got but even then I can’t sustain the reading for long)

    I must read more fiction though – it’s rare now for me to pick up a novel. Yet another thing to add to my “need to do list” :P

  6. 6 On October 24th, 2009, Rahab Klingensmith said:

    I absolutely love good books…..and what i do with the ones i really appreciate and want to gather as much memory from them is to highlight areas in pretty color, and make key note areas with small paper posts as well…I don’t travel too much~i do not like to fly….but, I enjoy reading lots…..
    ….taking my time and reading lots of material….Rahab <3

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