“I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” — Robert Louis Stevenson
Travels With Maggie
Osa Johnson wrote I Married Adventure the year after I was born. I think I was about 10 years old when I came across her book in the public library. It was the first travel book I ever read, and I was enthralled. From that moment on, I dreamed of having her kind of adventures.
It wasn’t until 2007 that I finally made it to Africa and went on a safari. Things had tremendously changed from Osa’s days, but at least I got to see wild lions and leopards and monkeys and elephants and all the other animals she wrote about in the book that captured my dreams. My great-grandchildren may not be so fortunate.
I’ve read hundreds of travel books since then. There’s always one by my bedside. Choosing just 10 to list here was difficult. I could easily have listed 10 different ones and been just as truthful. The ones I’ve chosen, however, have special meaning to me. I’ve just told you about the first. Here are the other nine – in no particular order.
Blue Highways by William Least Heat Moon. It was this book that was the role model for my present-day RV travels.
On the Road
by Charles Kuralt. I was an upbeat journalist with a desire to travel. How could this book not be on my list?
Road Fever by Tim Cahill. I’ve read just about everything this crazy Montanan has written. I get his sense of humor.
The Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen. An author with a strong sense of conservation and the value of both the landscape and wildlife.
Dessert Solitaire by Edward Abbey. An irreverent writer who writes about the landscapes I’ve trod and who loves them as much as I do.
Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer. One person’s account of an Everest expedition in which lives were lost, one of whom I had met and interviewed. His is not the only version of events but his writing can’t be faulted. I couldn’t stop reading.
Out of Africa by Isek Dineson. Once again my adventurous spirit is touched. I visited the home, now a museum, of Karen Blixen (alias Dineson) when I was in Africa.

John Steinbeck and Charley. Maggie and I are their counterparts but we don't follow in their wheel tracks. -- Photo courtesy of Wikipedia
Around the World in 80 Days
by Jules Verne. Does a fictional book count as a travel book? I vote that this one does.
Travels With Charley by John Steinbeck. When I first began planning my RV travels, I reread this book after a friend said Maggie and I were the female version of Steinbeck and Charley. I even toyed with the idea of retracing this great writer’s journey, but then wisely decided I needed to find my on path on the road.
Two books that belong on any Ten Best Travel Books are:
A Sense of the World, Jason Roberts
A Walk Across America, Peter Jenkins
I daresay Travels with Maggie will one day wind up on the list, as well.
Hi Pat,
Any book set in a foreign country sparks my wanderlust. The one book I’d recommend, Around the World in 80 Days, is already on your list.
Thanks, nice post.
Marcia
Thanks for responding. Perhaps for old time sakes I should read Verne’s book again.
Keep writing … Pat Bean https://patbean.wordpress.com
I’ve read plenty of travel books yet nothing comes immediately to mind. How odd. I have read the last three on your list so I was trying to think of something else.
Oh! I’ve got one. Isabella Bird. I don’t remember the name of the book but it was a series of letters she wrote to her sister regarding her travels to Estes Park and the Rocky Mountains. I loved it, especially after having traveled to some of the spots she visited. I can’t imagine the kind of pluck it took for her to make her way through that area in the winter months. Amazing.
It was called “A Lady’s Life in the Rocky Mountains.” I read it and passed it along to one of my granddaughters who likes to travel. It’s a great book. I especially enjoyed it because I am quite familiar with many of the places she wrote about. Thanks for reminding me of it Robin