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On the Hippie Trail

Istanbul to Kathmandu and the Making of a Travel Writer

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: At least 6 months
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: At least 6 months
Stow away with Rick Steves for a glimpse into the unforgettable moments, misadventures, and memories of his 1978 journey on the legendary Hippie Trail.
In the 1970s, the ultimate trip for any backpacker was the storied "Hippie Trail" from Istanbul to Kathmandu. A 23-year old Rick Steves made the trek, and like a travel writer in training, he documented everything along the way: jumping off a moving train, making friends in Tehran, getting lost in Lahore, getting high for the first time in Herat, battling leeches in Pokhara, and much more. The experience ignited his love of travel and forever broadened his perspective on the world.

This book contains edited selections from Rick's journal and travel photos with a 45-years-later preface and postscript reflecting on how the journey changed his life. Stow away with Rick Steves on the adventure of a lifetime through Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and Nepal.

You know Rick Steves. Now discover the adventure that made him the travel writer he is today.
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    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2025

      Popular and prolific travel guide author Steves resurrects his travel journal from 1978, when he and his friend Gene Openshaw decide to backpack along an overland trek called the Hippie Trail that became a well-worn route during the 1960s. It traces the Silk Road from Europe to Istanbul, Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, India, and Nepal and ends in Kathmandu. Steves's journal is condensed and finessed. The author was 23 at the time of writing and displays some of the cultural insensitivity of his age. He writes, for example, about a time he photographed a cremation ritual in India, which upset local people. Readers may see some of Steves's assumptions throughout the book as examples of white male entitlement, whereas others may admire his candor. A highlight of the book is his raw, sensory impressions. VERDICT Steves's journal offers a window into time, before travel through the greater Middle East became vastly more complicated. Recommended for Steves's fans and armchair travelers.--Barrie Olmstead

      Copyright 2025 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      In 1978, Rick Steves left his job teaching piano lessons to set out on the legendary Hippie Trail. Starting in Europe, Steves and his friend Gene left the "wading pool of European travel" (as he puts it) to visit old friends in Bulgaria and then embark on an epic journey from Istanbul to Kathmandu. Steves's trademark enthusiasm and joie de vivre are on full display as he recounts his 23-year-old self's awe at seeing Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and Nepal. Steves notes that shortly after this trip, and to the present day, several of these countries became regarded as unsafe for travel due to political upheaval. Nevertheless, he advocates continuing to travel where possible to quash ethnocentrism and make friends. S.E.G. © AudioFile 2025, Portland, Maine
    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2025
      The well-known TV traveler recounts a sentimental education. Born a few years too late to have been a classic hippie, Steves nonetheless threw his backpack on and, with an old friend, hit the "Hippie Trail"--a congeries of roads and railroad lines leading across Europe to India--in 1978. This book is built on a journal he kept along the way, one that he forgot until, "stuck at home during the pandemic, I stumbled across it." Known for decades for amiable PBS travelogues, Steves shows that the young longhair is the father of the man: All of his evenhandedness, generosity, and curiosity are in evidence from the minute he jumps his first train from Frankfurt to Yugoslavia. That's to say nothing of his resourcefulness, which sometimes involves finessing the rules: In then-Communist Bulgaria, he buys a ticket as far as Sofia but travels on to Plovdiv, convincing the annoyed conductor that he missed his stop. "Relishing my role as the stupid American tourist," Steves writes, "I really played it up." The pals brave Turkish highways with a driver they call the Pirate, cross into Iran and Afghanistan, and make it to India, having survived sketchy lodgings and any number of questionable foods. "What did the people think as we waltzed in and out of their lives?" he wonders. The answers are many: One old gentleman whom Steves meets in Kabul observes that a third of the world eats with forks, a third with chopsticks, and a third with their hands, "and we're all civilized just the same." It's a perfect sentiment for this gentle book, which is very much a young man's, with little bits of purple if not purple-haze prose ("Following this magical procession, we wandered through a timeless village floating in a wonderworld") punctuating the narrative. A pleasure for travel buffs, especially those who once plied the Hippie Trail--or wish they had.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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