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Showing posts with label Collections (Road Trip). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Collections (Road Trip). Show all posts

Sunday, 7 July 2013

Travelling with tinies around FRANCE

Ben Hatch, author of Are We Nearly There Yet? (the story of a family trip around Britain) hits France with his family and the result is Road To Rouen. His last odyssey around Britain clearly didn't put him off taking a leap into the unknown once again, and we are treated to a delightfully idiosyncratic journey - part memoir, part travelogue - undertaken by members of the Hatch family, to wit Ben, Dinah, Phoebe and Charlie. This is the consummate Brat guide (as opposed to the more famous Bradt guide) to being on the road with children.

Any of you wavering about what you can and can't do in the way of travel when you have young ones, need only to read this book as inspiration for what can be achieved, although it is not all plain sailing! From their home in Brighton the four of them set off to Normandy, heading South, returning via the Alps, and ending their trip in Paris and Disneyland (with a short unscheduled sidetrip to Pamplona). Experience vegetable growing in the Loire Valley via the "white knuckle spring onion ride" or baguette foraging in the banlieues (which is very tricky as the shops generally close for a very long lunch). Ben notes how they gravel everything in France (indeed they do, when you think about it); or, let the family be your guide in Fouras via the Wally Trolley, a Petit Train, ubiquitous across Europe for tourists to chug around places of interest - you know the sort, the blue-and-white land trains, fronted by miniature mock steam locomotives. (In fact, we at TripFiction have one such train cruising the aisles of our local shopping centre).

From the of the vegetable growing paradise that is the Loire, they head onto the Dordogne, 'the fruit bowl of France', where they visit a Prune Museum, go on to enjoy ruminations about Camembert, and check out the weirdoes in Bugarach. And still more to come - surfing and boarding in Biarritz and light aircraft manoeuvres in Megève. The family notches up at least 50 chateaux on this trip, and discovers that the French consume as much medication as the Japanese, indeed more than anyone else in Europe, because they are seemingly an unhappy bunch. And just read Ben's parallels between the Stars in their Cars parade at Disney with North Korea's parades of military hardware (not an obvious correlation but certainly feels familiar if you have had the Disney experience!). Or gain a sneaking respect for the Hatch family as they smuggle baguettes into Mickey's Kingdom......

Finally, much of the travelogue is interspersed with Ben's own personal and poignant memoirs of how he and Dinah got together, interwoven with memories of his Dad who passed away in 2007. A sense that Ben has, at times, struggled to live up to his Dad's achievements (a bigwig at the BBC); how the vagaries of the publishing industry make for a capricious income source; and a sad recognition that his Dad struggled within the family environment because work was such an overwhelming factor in his life. Some of this introspection, however, doesn't always sit comfortably alongside the jocular nature of the travelogue and wry observations that pepper the prose.

We said it in our review of "Are We Nearly There Yet?" and we say it here: a map of the route would be a great addition!

If you fancy more roadtrip adventures with other authors (including Ben's Are We Nearly There Yet?) then this link will take you to the relevant blogposts. As ever, if you would like to add your favourite roadtrip account, then let us know below in the Comments Box.


Bon voyage from Tina and the TripFiction Team!



Sunday, 17 March 2013

Hexham (not Haltwhistle) - the centre of Britain

We have selected two top books to escort you around the highways and byways of Britain "see a location through an author's eyes". Discover Britain!

Are We Nearly There Yet by Ben Hatch tells the story of Ben, his wife Dinah and their two pre-school children, Phoebe and Charlie who are commissioned by Frommers (the American equivalent to Time Out) to set out on a 5 month family odyssey, an 8000 mile journey around Britain. Only the foolhardy, surely, would take up the baton and set off from the Brighton area in a westerly direction and then up to the northern sphere, with a boot and roofrack full to bursting with luggage, two tinies in tow... but gamely, they embarked on this trip with aplomb and enthusiasm. In parts a chronicle of hilarious experiences, in part a travelogue that honestly charts the sights worth seeing (and those to be missed), interspersed with enough poo and vomit to keep the whole family (and the readers) down to earth (including an unusual encounter with a toothbrush, which results in a visit to Hexham Hospital). Encounters abound, with the World's Largest Pencil (or possibly not, as it transpires) at the Cumberland Pencil Museum (and Borrowdale graphite was the drawing material of choice of Michelangelo, well, I never....); from negative encounters in the Lake District (this is depressing when it is England's largest and best known national park, and is widely considered the most romantic spot in England - Bill Clinton proposed to Hilary here, as did Sir Paul McCartney to Heather Mills, which, of course, did not end well....); to the Robin Hood Experience (worth a miss, it would seem); to Craster, which at the turn of the 20th century was the UK Kipper Capital, smoking over 25,000 fish per day (the fish were "gutted by Scottish fishwives, who lived in ramshackle buildings called kip houses, suitable only for sleeping in" - hence the saying, to have a kip.

Scotland gets short shrift at just 3 pages and the geography goes a bit haywire at this point.
Daughter Phoebe has a larger than life presence in the book, and in the background is the tragic demise of Ben's Dad.  Relationship officionados will also be able to glean a bit about the couple's marital fit, and observe the interpersonal exchanges that really keep the show on the road! Overall, a gamut of emotions contained in one informative travelogue. In the next print run we would love a map to be included in the book, that charts their, at times, erratic journey!

Our second featured book is a work of fiction, and at 87 days and 627 miles it covers considerably less ground. The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce. is a gentle meander from Kingsbridge in Dorset to Berwick-upon-Tweed, the northernmost town in England, as Harold Fry finds a fit of passion on his way to post a letter and just continues walking in a northerly direction. Along the way he encounters beautiful English countryside, which is dreamily described and will just transport you to this green and pleasant land: Trees and flowers seemed to explode with colour and scent. The trembling branches of the horse chestnut balanced new candle spires of blossom. Rambling roses shot up garden walls, and the first of the deep red-peonies opened like tissue-paper creations. The apple trees began to shake off their blossom, and bore  beads of fruit; bluebells spread thick like water through the woodlands. The dandelions were already fluffheads of seed  all kinds of weather is thrown at him, from blistering sun to rain that drove at him in thick pins... (isn't that just a lyrical description of England at its best?).

This is a slow story of love and loss and love regained, Harold's aim to see his old friend and work colleague Queenie before she dies of cancer.  He shows unplumbed depths of determination as he ploughs on, accumulating a coterie of people who want to latch on to his journey, in the hope that his inspired walk will rub off  them and they too can take ownership of his "pilgrimage". Towards the end he diverts briefly to Hexham, to try and catch up with someone he met earlier on his walk.

A gentle and meditative novel, that entices you to keep up with our hero, tand to share his trials and tribulations as the miles pass by. Bit by bit the shared history that he,and his wife Maureen have long grappled with begins to take shape. A languorous read that will transport you to a ruminative place, but will frustrate readers who like a fast-paced book.


Saturday, 5 May 2012

Road Trip America

Iconic Route 66, Chuck Berry, Jack Kerouac, Miles Davis...we have selected four books to entertain and set the scene for something that is, well, just sooooo American!

A novel  about four women who go on a road trip from Wisconsin to Las Vegas. They are pretty much strangers, have bereavement in common, range in age from 20 - 70, and have very different personalities. A belter from Karen McQuestion! http://www.tripfiction.com/Book/2114






Billy Connolly, music-lover, biker, and scourge of the beige and the bland the world over, has dreamed about taking a trip on the legendary Route 66 since he first heard Chuck Berry belting out one of the greatest rock n roll records of all time. In this book he searches out the real America.






Sharp, stylised, gritty, diverse, dubious, sleazy....Indian Country Noir is an anthology of short stories around Native American culture. http://www.tripfiction.com/Book/1920 




No road trip planning can be complete without Jack Kerouac, American iconoclast On the Road. The narrative takes place in the late 1940s and is brim full of Americana - the soul of the beat movement, one of the greats of 20th century literature. http://www.tripfiction.com/Book/1501




A road trip in a classic 1970s Ford, no further description needed!
http://www.tripfiction.com/Book/1695





And if you are looking for further ideas on how to plan your road trip, visit http://www.roadtripamerica.com






Monday, 23 April 2012

Two Books travelling with Tinies around Britain and Europe

    "The wheels of the bus go round and round..... "     

Keeping Tinies entertained is an artform and one of the most helpful things one can do is read inspirational travelogues written by others who have chronicled their trips with their own little ones. You CAN travel and you CAN have fun!


So, we have picked a couple of books which chart the ups and downs of life on the road with the young ones and would love it if you would leave some comments on your experiences of travelling with children - your thoughts can encourage others to be brave and take the plunge! And at the bottom of this blogpost we have a link to the ladiesroom.co.uk  which is full of handy hints for travelling with kids!

These books cover terrain including Britain, Norway, Greece, France and Spain


Our first choice is written by Alice Griffin, who shares the story of how she embarked on a travel adventure with her young family during the first two years of her daughter's life. Taking in Norway, Greece, France and Spain on the way, Alice weaves an inspiring travelogue with practical advice to help other mums and dads who enjoy interesting and authentic travel with their baby or toddler on board. Tips-a-plenty.... http://www.tripfiction.com/Book/1816






Our second choice is "Are We nearly there" -  'A family's 8,000 miles round Britain in a Vauxhall Astra' they were bored, broke, burned out and turning 40, so when Ben and Dinah saw the advert looking for a husband and wife team with young kids to write a guidebook about family travel around Britain, they jumped at the chance. With naive visions of staring moodily across Coniston Water and savouring Cornish pasties, they embark on a mad-cap five-month trip with daughter Phoebe, four, and son Charlie, two....... http://www.tripfiction.com/Book/1600


http://www.theladiesroom.co.uk/2012/04/20/ben-hatchs-top-ten-tips-for-travelling-with-kids-2/