Lands of lost borders A journey on the Silk Road

Kate Harris, 1982-

Book - 2018

As a teenager, Kate Harris realized that the career she craved--to be an explorer, equal parts swashbuckler and metaphysician--had gone extinct. From what she could tell of the world from small-town Ontario, the likes of Marco Polo and Magellan had mapped the whole earth; there was nothing left to be discovered. Looking beyond this planet, she decided to become a scientist and go to Mars. In between studying at Oxford and MIT, Harris set off by bicycle down the fabled Silk Road with her childhood friend Mel. Pedaling mile upon mile in some of the remotest places on earth, she realized that an explorer, in any day and age, is the kind of person who refuses to live between the lines. Forget charting maps, naming peaks: what she yearned for wa...s the feeling of soaring completely out of bounds. The farther she traveled, the closer she came to a world as wild as she felt within.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

915.8/Harris
1 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 915.8/Harris Checked In
2nd Floor 915.8/Harris Due Jul 23, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Travel writing
Published
New York, NY : Dey St., an imprint of William Morrow [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Kate Harris, 1982- (author)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
305 pages : illustrations, map ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-304).
ISBN
9780062839343
  • Marco made me do it: North America
  • Roof of the world: Tibetan Plateau
  • Natural history: England and New England
  • Undercurrents: Black Sea
  • The cold world awakens: Lesser Caucasus
  • Angle of incidence: Greater Caucasus
  • Borderlandia: Caspian Sea
  • Wilderness/wasteland: Ustyurt Plateau and Aral Sea Basin
  • The source of a river: Pamir Knot
  • A mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam: Tarim Basin and Tibetan Plateau
  • Road's end: Indo-Gangetic Plain and Greater Himalaya.
Review by New York Times Review

THIS SEASON'S TRAVEL SELECTIONS find authors facing crushing isolation, angry bulls and midnight checkpoints, as well as that most terrifying of travel's perils, the family road trip. From the Azores to Patagonia to the Silk Road, the pull of the open road is as strong as ever - no matter the consequences. The results are among the most exciting crop of travel books in years. As a child, Kate Harris was fascinated by Marco Polo. Forget that the famous explorer wasn't as interested in exotic lands as he was in the riches and fame he might achieve. As a young girl growing up in rural Canada, Harris dreamed of the far-off lands Polo described, igniting an obsession with the world beyond the farthest bend in the road. LANDS OF LOST BORDERS: A Journey on the Silk Road (Dey street, $24.99) is the gift Harris sends back from that beyond. Say what you want about the value of experience and the power of wisdom, there's something undeniably intoxicating about the blank page of youth being written upon. And write Harris can. With elegant, sensitive prose, she takes the reader along on her travels, shares her passion with infectious enthusiasm and invites us into her heart. Early on she confesses that "the great goal of my life was getting lost." To that end, feeling "young and free and rashly unassailable," she and a childhood friend set out on the first leg of what would become an epic bicycle journey, carrying her over the Tibetan plateau in search of "not answers exactly, but a way of life equal to the wildness of existing at all." Later, Harris bikes along "the scum on the rim of a giant bathtub" that is the Black Sea and eventually makes it to a desert "landscape of revelation" in Uzbekistan. Harris has more on her mind than merely seeing the sights and chatting up a few locals. "It was the truth I was after, the deepest wonder, nothing less." Such outlandish pronouncements are the prerogative of youth, yet Harris's wholehearted belief in the possibilities of the journey forces her readers to toss aside any world-weary doubts they may have harbored. We sweat every illegal checkpoint crossing, chew on every grain of dust-storm sand and sip every cup of yak butter tea right along with her. That she is able to cast and maintain such a spell of wonder is no small feat. To say that Harris has become the explorer she always wanted to be is the highest praise I can think to offer. Exploration of a different sort is on the mind of Porter Fox in NORTHLAND: A 4,000-Mile Journey Along America's Forgotten Border (Norton, $26.95). What the reader might at first think of as well-trodden terrain is, Fox quickly informs us, anything but. He begins with a provocation - "No one knows where America's northern border begins" - and goes on to surprise, enlighten and delight us for the next 200-plus pages. With so much of our attention given over to the southern border with Mexico, few think to look north, to our oldest, longest (and more porous) boundary. Luckily for the reader, Fox has. Growing up in Maine and summering a few miles from the "Hi-Line," Fox is a natural choice for the job. Armed with a canoe, a tent and determination, he sets out on a three-year journey with no itinerary other than to get from Maine to Washington. "On a map the boundary is a line. On land, it passes through impossible places - ravines, cliff bands, bogs, waterfalls, rocky summits, white water - that few people ever see." Early on, he encounters fishermen who still struggle with gray zones in a watery border established nearly 250 years and a dozen treaties ago, and spends his nights sleeping in forests of "pure black." In the Great Lakes, Fox trades in his canoe for a lift aboard a 740-foot freighter where one crew member warns him, "This place is full of lunatics." Traveling across Lakes Erie, Huron and Superior, enduring days of fog, he struggles not to "end up staring at a wall for hours at a time." Through the Boundary Waters region of Minnesota, navigating his way around wildfires, past pipeline protests and through Sioux territory, Fox soldiers on across U.S. Route 2, shadowing the border. As with many tales of the solitary traveler on a distant quest, otherness attracts otherness, and Fox is frequently confronted with that certain kind of lost soul who haunts the fringes of society. These pages are filled with such interactions, which lend them a deeper resonance. Near the end of his journey, Fox relays an encounter with a hitchhiker he picked up in Washington who shares a story of conditional redemption that is at once uplifting and heartrending, leaving Fox searching for both connection and a way home. Whether experiencing run-ins with crusty locals, reviving long dead historical characters last heard from in high school history books, enduring rough weather or savoring majestic landscapes, he brings it all to vivid life. With strong descriptive powers and a clear appetite for his task, Fox succeeds in making his journey sound romantic, urgent, valuable and appealing as hell. Saudade is a Portuguese word with no direct translation that conveys a deep longing for something that perhaps never was and yet may never come again. It suggests a melancholy satisfaction. The 17th-century Portuguese writer Manuel de Melo called saudade "a pleasure you suffer." Capturing its elusive nature is central to understanding the Portuguese spirit, and more specifically the Azorean one, in the case of Diana Marcum's the tenth island (Little A, $24.95). A California resident with roots in the American South, Marcum may seem an unlikely guide to understanding this condition, yet in her engaging travel memoir she captures the spirit of saudade with an eye for detail and a playful earnestness that takes advantage of and at the same time casts aside her journalistic credentials. A Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter with The Los Angeles Times, Marcum covered California's Central Valley, where she was first introduced to the Azorean diaspora. Understandably attracted by the Portuguese devotion to family but more inexplicably consumed with a longing for the islands, with which she shared no obvious connection, Marcum confesses, "Maybe for me it was more the feeling that I was an island, separate and alone." With little to hold her down, she pays a visit to the remote Azorean archipelago, which lies nearly a thousand miles off the Portuguese coast in the middle of the Atlantic. Following the sage travel advice offered on her departure, to let serendipity steer her course, Marcum encounters a strange land filled with the requisitely quirky locals - among them the fire chief/ambulance driver/musician who will act as her island guide and the martini-swilling woman who becomes her neighbor. She also encounters a more humane form of bullfighting, which might more accurately be dubbed pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey with a moderately angry cow. Marcum is fascinated by the countless stories she hears of the departure of local people from the islands and their inexorable yearning to return. Marcum herself makes repeated visits, eventually bringing along her unmanageable dog and taking up residence in a converted stable beside a mansion that had crumbled to the ground during the last big earthquake. Not entirely sure where this is all going, or what it's amounting to, Marcum makes friends along the way, snoozes on rocks beside the sea and flirts with love, both local and imported. Her embrace of isolation, coupled with her simultaneous yearning for connection, guarantees her a healthy dose of saudade. In the remote islands of the Azores, Marcum seems to have found her spot. The crime novelist Thomas H. Cook isn't so much searching for a place to fit in as looking to illuminate a murky corner of the travel sphere. In doing so, he provides perhaps this season's most unlikely narrative turn, even DARKNESS SINGS: From Auschwitz to Hiroshima: Finding Hope in the Saddest Places on Earth (Pegasus, $27.95) draws its inspiration from some of the cold, hard horrors that have emerged from the darker aspects of our nature. Since childhood, after a strange and morbid encounter at his father's side, Cook has found himself drawn to places that have seen "the weird and the frightful, the arbitrary, the unfair, the inexplicable." But rather than create a book of sorrows, he has set out to give us "a grateful celebration of the mysterious power of dark places," sites where "our thoughts can become unmoored and free to roam, allowing us to experience our most intimate relationship with the past." Often traveling with his wife and daughter, Cook has spent years visiting the locations of disasters and atrocities : famously horrific places like Auschwitz and the battlefield at Verdun, as well as places that have experienced lesser-known miseries. In Cambodia, he visits Pol Pot's "great reeking mess of ideological purity" and "concentrated evil," Ttiol Sleng, where "the air sizzles with immediate and excruciating physical pain." In Italy, a dreary looking river where hundreds of slaves were killed provides a fascinating teaching moment with his daughter. Later, in Alice Springs, Australia, Cook unfavorably compares the treatment of Aboriginals with the segregated American South of his childhood. In the middle of the Outback, he's disturbed to find "both the offering and acceptance of condescension more or less the order of the day." But it's at the leper colony of Kalaupapa, on the island of Molokai, in Hawaii, where Cook seems to have met his match. There he encounters palpable sorrow in a place that is "strikingly bleak and curiously still." He comes away feeling an "unjustifiable voyeurism" and concludes - for the only time in his travels - that he should never have visited. As Cook's journeys accumulate, a reader loses any trepidation about approaching these sites of sorrow, awakening instead to Cook's main purpose as the narrative acquires a humble gravitas. Cook promises that "there is much to be gained where much has been lost, and we deny ourselves that bounty at the peril of our souls," a truth to which this surprising volume attests. At the other end of the travel spectrum is Richard Ratay's DON'T MAKE ME PULL OVER: An Informal History of the Family Road Trip (Scribner, $27), the season's most playful (and best titled) entry. Ratay came of age in Wisconsin during the 1970s, just as America was hitting the road in record numbers. He vividly captures that relatively brief - but iconic - time before cheap air travel and Wi-Fi, when "six people locked up together in a tiny padded room," hurtling down the highway without seatbelts, was something not simply to be enjoyed but survived. Ratay gleefully recounts his childhood wonder at being lifted from bed by his father and being deposited in the back of the family's Lincoln Continental beside his siblings, only to have the bitter Midwest winter magically replaced by the warmth of the South. Under Ratay's confident and relaxed spell, anyone of a certain age will be instantly transported back to (and perhaps yearn for) those more innocent times when Fuzzbusters and eight-track players were the order of the day, AAA TripTiks were cutting edge and candy cigarettes were the not-so-secret desire of nearly every preteen. Deceptively informative and cluttered with scores of useless fun-facts ("During the 1970s alone, Americans logged 14.4 trillion miles - enough to travel from Earth to Pluto and back 2,500 times"), Ratay's book reminds us just how recent an invention our Interstate highway system is, and how the network utterly transformed not just travel but the American psyche. Ratay also makes clear how family travel has changed since Howard Johnson's was considered fine dining, "The Brady Bunch" was held up by kids as the ideal family, and Bubble Yum was rumored to contain spider eggs. Recalling a later family airplane flight to Washington, D.C., he succinctly captures what we've lost: "We'd taken a trip but we'd made no journey." With an eye for detail and a penchant for research that leads him down charming rabbit holes (remember that "crying Indian" anti-littering commercial from the 1970s?), Ratay succeeds in eliciting genuine emotion even as his comic voice steers the narrative clear of cheap sentimentality. This high-spirited romp down the byways of America is part social history, part memoir and a loving salute to that brief time when the wood-paneled family station wagon was king of the open road. No book I've read in recent memory resides in as much isolation as Katherine Silver's translation of Maria Sonia Cristoff ? FALSE CALM (Transit, paper, $16.95). Cristoff grew up in the remote southern portion of Argentina. "As a child," she explains, "I saw this isolation as positive, as had so many European explorers in Patagonia." Only later, as an adolescent, did she determine that its vast space contained "a kind of nightmarish logic, where I could walk and walk but still remain in the same place." And so she left, only to return after two decades, "when I no longer saw things one way or the other." Cristoff came back to talk with the people, and not talk with them - to share silence and space with those who lived under their oppressive weight. She wanted to become, as she writes, "a lightning rod, a receiving antenna," realizing that "the atmosphere spoke through me." The challenge of this book is also its triumph: Cristoff makes no effort to lead or coddle the reader, to paint a romantic portrait of a remote land or tell us how we ought react to the lonely, frightening, occasionally heroic lives she exposes. With an almost clinical remove, made possible by the unspoken empathy that comes from growing up "in the middle of that yellowish chalky color that wears out your eyes," Cristoff paints a picture of devastating singularity. Hers is a bold, beautiful book. Whether she's describing a shopkeeper who long ago came home to attend his dying father ("I returned for a week and stayed forever") or a man who gave up on his dream of flying a small plane and felt "defeat in every cell, but not like the counterpart to some success; an existential defeat, the curse of having been born," Cristoff leaves out so much surface detail that might have made for a less demanding, more passive reading experience, instead opting to sift down toward the marrow of her subjects. No punches are pulled in illuminating the perils of Patagonian solitude. The oil field pumper whose job requires him to patrol the land, mile by lonely mile, day after solitary day, slips farther from the influence of other people until he "no longer has anything to say to them or ask them or tell them." He goes on to explain that "you gradually start realizing that there's less and less you need from them." The gasp induced by this and other revelations slices through the reader like the wind over the Patagonian steppe, reminding us - as do all these books, in their own ways - that the most harrowing journey is often the one within. Andrew MCCARTHY is the author of the young adult novel "Just Fly Away" and the travel memoir "The Longest Way Home."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 11, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Natural history devotee Harris' debut is an homage to science a love letter to geology, zoology, astronomy, and everything in between and a travelogue-memoir in which she traces her academic pursuits, solo travels, and year-long bicycle trek along the storied Silk Road with her dear friend, Mel. Starting in Turkey, the intrepid duo navigates thousands of kilometers along with all kinds of weather, police assistance and interference, government bureaucracy, visa woes, searing muscles, and soaring spirits. In journeying to their Himalayan destination, Kate and Mel cut through boundaries both real and imagined, exploring the complexities of control and the ambiguity of borders (most poignantly vivified in Chinese-controlled Tibet) while questioning if exploration is flawed by its inherent desire to lay claim to place and experience. Fueled by the observations of someone fascinated by her surroundings, Harris' stunning and nuanced prose limns sweeping landscapes and offers engaging history lessons all while maintaining a brilliant self-awareness and authenticity. Vivid, pithy descriptions read like indelible poetry, exemplifying Harris' reverence for the interconnectedness of our world. Lands of Lost Borders is illuminating, heart-warming, and hopeful in its suggestion that we will explore not to conquer but to connect. After all, "what does the Silk Road have to do with Mars, except everything?" A sure hit with book groups.--Katharine Uhrich Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Nature writer and adventurer Harris details her bike journey along the Silk Road, in this beautifully rendered if sometimes slow-moving debut. Growing up, Harris wanted to be an explorer; when she got older, however, she went to Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship and later to MIT where she found the drudgery of the laboratory unbearable. As an escape, she and her best friend, Mel, planned their bike adventure and were soon pedaling along the Silk Road, starting on the pungent banks of the Black Sea ("The bottom waters are poor in oxygen but rich in hydrogen sulphide, a colourless, poisonous gas that reeks of rotten eggs"). They biked across often treacherous landscapes (and took planes or trains along routes inaccessible by bike) through Turkey, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, India, Nepal, and China; they ascended mountains and traversed river valleys. The trip concluded at the Siachen Glacier in the Himalayas at the edge of the Tibetan plateau, where "the wind was more alive than the branches it moved, and so big it could only be the mountains breathing." Harris's talent is in her prose, as she offers breathtaking descriptions of the Silk Road, shrouded in mystery and wonder. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Canadian nature writer Harris had always dreamed of being an explorer like Marco Polo, or going to Mars, or both. Prior to attending graduate school at Oxford, she convinced her childhood friend Mel to bike part of the Silk Road with Harris for four months near the Tibetan Plateau. Through Oxford, then MIT, love found and lost, Harris hungered for the road, longing to bike the remainder. She quits her MIT PhD program, convinces Mel, again, to join her, and they continue their trek. During their lengthy (4,350-mile) journey, they face everything from icy puddles, lost bicycle parts, difficulties with visas, guard rails, countless instant noodle meals, and frequent stays with total strangers. Unfortunately, what could have been a deep exploration of cultures and people dissolves into an impersonal, distant view of a long expedition. Oddly disjointed history lessons are mixed in, at times with little transition or context for the jump in or out of the past. For a travel writer, Harris seemingly has little interest in the people or places she experienced along the way. Verdict For fans of Harris's travel articles or cycling journey sagas.-Katie Lawrence, Grand Rapids, MI © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A debut travelogue chronicling a modern explorer's bicycle ride along the ancient Silk Road, a journey that beautifully reveals much about the history and nature of exploration itself."Born centuries too late for the life I was meant to live," Harris cultivated an early love affair with wilderness, exploration, and the unknown. Due to a chance encounter with a children's book, the author became particularly intrigued by Marco Polo, and she "decided to be just like him when I grew up." Though she studied at such prestigious institutions as Oxford, where she was a Rhodes Scholar, and MIT, school was merely "a venuefor exploration." While the narrative is peppered with brief, entertaining vignettes about some of the author's early travels, the meat of her story is the nearly yearlong bike ride following the Silk Road with her pal Mel. With humor, deep sentiment, and often poetic prose, Harris takes the reader not only through "the stans" (Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, etc.) of Asia, but also through the history and current state of adventure travel. Along the way, the author provides insightful discussions of national borderlines, for which she clearly has little use. "The more I learned about the South Caucasus, with its closed borders and warring enclaves," she writes, "the more the place seemed like a playground game of capture-the-flag, all in the dubious name of nationalism." This is a tale of beautiful contrasts: broken landscapes and incomparable mountain vistas, repugnant sights and smells and euphoric baklava hangovers, geographic neighbors at war and the moving hospitality of total strangers. Harris explains the grueling and sublime nature of biking through descriptions of impoverished yet beautiful places as well as the fraught history and hopeful future of her kind. "Explorers might be extinct, in the historic sense of the vocation," she writes, "but exploring still exists, will always exist: In the basic longing to learn what in the universe we are doing here."Exemplary travel writing: inspiring, moving, heartfelt, and often breathtaking. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.