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Jupiter's travels / Ted Simon.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: London : Sphere, 2008.Edition: First published in 1979Description: 443 pages : illustrations, maps ; 20 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780751541755 (pbk.)
Subject(s):
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Non-Fiction Davis (Central) Library Non-Fiction Non-Fiction 910.41 SIM 1 Available T00471937
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

* The classic travel book that inspired Long Way Round and Long Way Down

"One man one motorbike, one planet. The classic adventure that inspired: Long way round"--Cover.

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Reviews provided by Syndetics

Kirkus Book Review

A smashing, clich‚-free global adventure as Ted Simon, the Magellan of the Motorcycle, circles the world on a four-year, two-wheeled solo jaunt, determined to see it all despite fear at every turn. To wheel through so many nations over strange and often torn roads, to negotiate roadless deserts, was indeed cause for fear. But he did it; and clocked 63,000 miles, returning a changed man and prey, at last, to a new fear--rootlessness, a sense of coming apart. Subsidized by the London Sunday Times, Simon gets a completely unmodified motorcycle from Britain's Triumph factory in late 1973 and leaves England for France. His first leg takes him to Italy, Sicily, and Tunis. Arabic is sheer gibberish to him as he crosses Libya and worries that he won't be allowed into Egypt. But he is and follows the Nile to the Sudan where he finds himself crossing hundreds of miles of hard desert in the midday heat, and running out of gas in the trackless wastes. No road! But he meets many friendly Sudanese, who ask him to address their students. Then it's on to unfriendly Ethiopia where poverty has hardened every face. And down through the jungles of Kenya, the elephant-filled plains of Tanzania to Johannesburg and the very tip of Africa--and rapturous, lightning-filled euphoria. By boat to northern Brazil, down through Rio to Uruguay, over to Chile and up the east coast to Southern California. . . by boat to Australia, all over India (meeting Sai Baba) where he rises above fear of death. . . through the Mideast and back to France. . . then to the Triumph factory--in triumph. A vicarious whirlwind for armchair sloths. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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