Books That Inspire Travel: Travel Bloggers’ Favorite Books

Books are the first adventures many of us experienced and have the power to inspire us to explore the world. Like travel, they are a way of getting out of our own experiences and being a part of the world. Here is a collection of books that inspired wanderlust in travel bloggers. Enjoy reading about more books that have inspired travel in others…

Being interested in history, when I travel I bring along a book that can really immerse me in events that occurred where I am visiting. Last spring I went to Charleston, South Carolina and my book was The Invention of Wings by Sue Monk Kidd. The story explores the lives of and relationship between a slave girl and a plantation owner’s daughter. It explores the US’ slave history and its treatment of women. Reading the book while I traveled made it easier to vividly imagine the setting, but also brought depth to seeing the slave houses at plantations I visited and government buildings in Charleston. In addition, it was a spectacular read! Ā Read more about my visit to Charleston.

Titlebook

Shop for your copy of The Invention of Wings now.

A Walk Across the Sun

Books that inspire travelNikoleta fromĀ http://bonfiredream.wix.com/wanderlust

A Walk Across the Sun by Corban Addison is a book set all over the world. After a natural disaster, two girls from India who just lost their parents find themselves in the world of human trafficking. No matter how hard they try, they get separated. On the other hand, we read a story of a detective who’s loved one is Indian and who decides to fight against human trafficking directly in India, which is a work almost impossible, as he was told by many. This story shows how awful our society is, yet it shows that there is still hope. From the way the older sister talked about India, about her homeland, I started loving the place despite its dark and dangerous reputation.

Buy your copy of A Walk Across the Sun now.

The Lord of the Rings

books that inspire travelOdoardo fromĀ http://www.queidue.it/

Incredibly enough, the book that most inspired me to travel takes place in a fictional world. The Lord of theĀ Rings describes both a journey as a travel and a journey towards personal maturity. The book can be summarized with one of the most famous lines of Tolkien: ā€œNot all those who wander are lostā€. One of theĀ best tributes to travel ever written! To read more of what Odoardo thinks about this book read here.

Shop for any form of Lord of the Rings here.

Famous Five

books that inspire travel, part 2Elizabeth fromĀ A Suitcase Full of Books

My favorite childhood book series is Enid Blytonā€™s Famous Five mysteries. It was a dream come true to visit Corfe Castle and the surrounding Dorset countryside in England, as this area inspired the setting of the series. I was most excited to visit the real life Ginger Pop Shop, named for the shop frequented in the book by the five quite often, and of course the castle. The castle ruins rose from a hilltop and stood like stone monuments, representing a dark history of the infamous prison castle it once was. Yet in the context of simple castle ruins that inspired Blytonā€™s books, I could not imagine a more perfect place!

Read the full post about her visit to Corfe Castle here.

Forest Gump

books that inspire travelby Anthony Wheeler, not a blogger, just a cool, smart guy- a college professor who loves history and travel..

While Winston Groom is most known for writing Forest Gump, he’s published several acclaimed history books, one of which sent me on a journey to the battle fields from World War I. In ‘A Storm in Flanders’, Groom writes about the 4 years of battles surrounding Ypres, Belgium during World War I. To this day in the UK, the hamlet of Passendale (Passchendaele), where the 3rd Battle of Ypres was fought, is synonymous with the folly and waste of war. I visited Ypres in June of 2011, just as the poppies in Flanders field were in bloom. Just as in Groom’s book, I trekked the 12 km from the Menin Gate, now a monument to the 54,000 missing soldiers in Ypres, to the hamlet of Passendale to visit Tyne Cot Cemetery. In the cemetery, there is a cross built atop of a German bunker that marks the farthest advancement of British troops during the battle; several hundred yards of advancement at the cost of thousands of casualties. Every evening at 8 PM since 1928, local buglers from Ypres sound out the “last post” in memory of the fallen. It’s a moving experience, to say the least.

Search for book by Winston Groom.

City of Fallen Angels

Books that inspire travelAnd last, but not least,Ā Rob Taylor from www.2traveldads.com

Venice, Italy – City of Falling AngelsĀ by John Berendt

We were planning our itinerary for our first trip to Europe together. My husband and I had our list of sites and cities that each of us was interested in. We had agreed upon starting in Paris and wandering through France, visiting palaces, castles and cathedrals. We booked our flights; we booked two of our hotels; we bought Eurail passes… And then I was given a thick, hardback book. I read so much at university that I was done reading once I was out (not really, but you get it).Ā  I picked up this book, not knowing anything about the story but being familiar with the author, as John Berendt as he also wrote Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. I was captured immediately and couldn’t stop reading. I was halfway through the book when I realized that it was a non-fiction written as a novel.

The main story is around the Fenice Opera House fire, including the grand cast of Venetian characters who had a hand in investigating and rebuilding it, and finally its resurrection.Ā  The character development was genuine.Ā  The city of Venice itself was a character.Ā  The details of the backstreets of the city, the mystery, the levels of society, history: Ā together they made such an impression that I just had to include Venice in our trip.

I sprang the news on Chris (my husband) and we cancelled more than half of our plans.Ā  We veered south a from Nice, France and crossed into Italy. From there we camped in Cinque Terre in a yurt, ran through Pisa in less than three hours with huge packs on our backs, toured Florence when everything but the Uffizi was closedā€¦and ended up in Venice.Ā  And were we glad we did.Ā  It was everything I thought it would be from reading City of Falling Angels. From the bustling Grand Canal to the collapsing palazzos, back alleys ending in the water and picturesque foot bridges, everything about Venice was perfect and just what was depicted in the book. We werenā€™t let down and every moment away from our original itinerary was amazing.

Buy your copy of City of Falling Angels now.

All the Way to the Ocean

Books that inspire travel

Jacksonville Beach, FloridaAll the Way to the OceanĀ by Joel Harper

At home, we read stories all of the time. We have our favorites and one of them is All the Way to the Ocean. While the literary value isnā€™t found in a dramatic story line or humorous characters, itā€™s our oldest sonā€™s fave.Ā  The premise of the childrenā€™s book is that one kid litters and the other corrects him and they learn about trash going all of the way to the ocean and destroying habitats and lives. Why is this important?

At home, we live across the street from the beach, and despite ours and our neighbors efforts and proper behaviors, there is still trash that ends up on the beach.Ā  We donā€™t know where it comes from, but itā€™s there.Ā  When we rememberĀ we bring a bag with us on walks to collect any trash we find.Ā  Thatā€™s life and we try to make it better.

We arrived at Jacksonville Beach just before sunset one nightā€¦ and the beach was completely clean.Ā  It was amazing.Ā  Weā€™ve visited many beaches in our travels, but never have we come across a beach that was so well respected.Ā  The only waste anywhere on the shoreline was a washed up jellyfish and some beach grass.Ā  It was exactly as any beach anywhere should be.Ā  The clean beach gave us the perfect opportunity to relate back to the kids exactly why itā€™s important to act responsibly and remember that everything that falls on the ground goes all of the way to the ocean.

Shop for your copy of All the Way to the Ocean now.

Wild

10 Books That Inspire TravelShanti at A Wanderphile

Seeking self-redemption, novice hiker Cheryl Strayed suffered through 1,100 miles along the Pacific Coast Trail in America.

The book, Wild had me cheering on the sidelines for Cheryl to overcome her demons. Sheā€™d been living a life that she wasnā€™t proud of ā€“ destroying her marriage by cheating on her husband and reaching new lows through a short-lived heroin addiction.

In this story the burden is both physical and psychological. Cherylā€™s backpack (nicknamed ā€œMonsterā€) was so heavy that she literally wobbled under its weight. The extra weight caused by superfluous items that make any experienced hiker shake their head. A foldable saw! And those same hikers grimace in empathy when she describes the endless blisters, lost toe nails and ā€œduct-tape booteesā€.
An inspirational story that makes me want to strap on my backpack!

Buy your copy of Wild now.

The Hunchback of Notre Dame and Heart of Darkness

books that inspire travel
Nikoleta fromĀ Bonfire Dream
One book that I completely adored reading wasĀ The Hunchback of Notre-DameĀ by a famous French author Victor Hugo. It is a book written in the first part of 19th century. It is a gothic and romantic novel that takes place in the famous Paris. It is not a travel book, yet the pictures Hugo describes trigger wanderlust even in the laziest among us.
Another novel that I loved reading is Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. This book is even older than The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, first published in 1899. It is a book told from the point of view of an old sailor who narrates his experience from working on the Congo River. Readers not only travel with him and explore “blank spaces on the maps” in Africa, but are also showed the disastrous effects of slavery and exploitation of Africa. You can encounter “wilderness” that has almost ceased to exist by now.

The Alchemist

thealchemist
Eva from EvaBoch
I’ve read this book a few times in my life and every single time I felt even more inspired to travel. It’s a book about a journey in one’s life, not to a specific place, but to a place of happiness and making your dreams come true. It tackles on the simplest, yet the most extraordinary aspects of life and makes you realize that fear should never be in your way when going after what you want. It helped me go through with the decision to quit a job I hated and set off onto this adventure of travel vlogging, which now makes me so fulfilled.

Oh, The Places You Will Go!

books that inspire travel
As a teacher, every year I get a new class, I love to start off a new year with themĀ by reading an inspirational story. Every class Iā€™ve had I always readĀ Oh The Places Youā€™ll GoĀ by Dr Seuss. But, as time goes on, the story has inspired me moreĀ than anything else. Although a story for children, I found a lot of meaning andĀ inspiration from the words, ā€œCongratulations! Today is your day. Youā€™re off to great places! Youā€™re off and away!Ā You have brains in your head, you have feet in your shoes, you can steer yourselfĀ any direction you choose. Youā€™re on your own and you know what you know and you are the one whoā€™ll decide where to go.ā€ So I did, I moved to Milan, Italy to teach and itā€™s the best decision I ever made as IĀ can fulfillĀ my career and my dreams of travelling all at the same time.
Buy your copy of Oh, The Places You’ll Go. This is a great graduation gift too!

The Tale of Peter Rabbit

books that inspire travel
Ā Michele from LeggingIt

I was inspired to visit the Lake District in England because of my love of the Beatrix Potter Peter RabbitĀ books when I was a child. As I grew up I realized this area was what inspired her to draw such beautiful characters and write the stories I loved as a child. There is a museum there with some of her original art along with some interesting bits and pieces from her life.

Shop for Peter Rabbit books now.

RiAyXeX9T

books that inspire travel

 


RiAyXeX9T

I have loved putting together this collaboration- now I have an even longer to-read list!

I hope you enjoyed this collection of books from travel bloggers that inspired them to travel. Immerse yourself in the worlds that are opened from books and the big wide world that is out there to experience! Also, check out stories that inspire me.

If you buy a book following the links in the post you will help support the running of this website, as well as my reading habits, at no additional cost to you. Many thanks.

 

If you liked it, please share it. Thank you!

12 thoughts on “Books That Inspire Travel: Travel Bloggers’ Favorite Books”

  1. Good to add some more titles to my “to read” list this year. I love the Lord of the Rings series – for me, I always read it when I feel like I’m struggling on a journey and need a little boost. šŸ™‚

    Reply

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