David Bockino

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David Bockino

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Born
in Port Jefferson, NY, The United States
Website

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Influences
William Dalyrmple, Peter Hessler, Bill Bryson, Paul Theroux, Jan Morri ...more

Member Since
February 2013


I was born and raised in New York. I live in Durham, North Carolina. I teach at Elon University. And my first book - The Guidebook Experiment - is about a trip I took to South America to explore how the proliferation of "guidebook material" (i.e. Yelp, TripAdvisor, Google Maps) has changed the way we see the world. ...more

Average rating: 3.55 · 141 ratings · 12 reviews · 6 distinct worksSimilar authors
Greetings from Myanmar

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The Guidebook Experiment: D...

3.83 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 2015 — 2 editions
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Game On: How Sports Media G...

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Over/Under: An Unexpected H...

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Big Nate Strikes ...
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The Eternity Code
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Big Nate by Lincoln Peirce
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“David Steinberg does in his book Burma/Myanmar: What Everyone Needs to Know, to”
David Bockino, Greetings from Myanmar

“This attitude is by no means unusual, even in Bagan. Nearly a hundred years ago, British writer Somerset Maugham passed through the region, recounting the visit in his book The Gentleman in the Parlour. Maugham enjoyed Bagan, calling it a “strange and melancholy spot,” but had no interest in exhausting himself through obsessive temple-hopping: “My curiosity,” he wrote, “was satisfied with a visit to half a dozen of the pagodas.” One night, as Maugham relaxed on the veranda of his guesthouse, a fellow traveler joined the author and began explaining the particulars of several notable temples—when they were built, under what king, etc. His lecture fell on deaf ears: But I did not want to know the facts he gave me. What did it matter to me what kings had reigned there, what battles they had fought and what lands they had conquered? I was content to see them as a low relief on a temple wall in a long procession, with their hieratic attitudes, seated on a throne and receiving gifts from the envoys of subjugated nations, or else, with a confusion of spears, in the hurry and skelter of chariots, in the turmoil of battle. No, no, no, that won’t do, said his companion. Facts and context are what matter, he insisted: “I want to know things. Whenever I go anywhere I read everything about it that has been written…. I am a mine of information.” To which Maugham replied, “But what is the good of information that means nothing to you? Information for its own sake is like a flight of steps that leads to a blank wall.” It is better, Maugham would probably say, to simply sit back and enjoy the view.”
David Bockino, Greetings from Myanmar

“These visitors remain far removed from the conversations between archaeologists, historians, and government officials concerning Bagan’s legacy. Instead, they arrive intrigued by the cover photo of so many Myanmar guidebooks: a panoramic shot of the sprawling, temple-filled plains of a grand ancient city. To the vast majority of these tourists, Bagan isn’t a complex matrix of preservation, economic growth, and cultural tradition. It isn’t a place to be debated or discussed or analyzed. To many of these tourists, Bagan is simply a place to look around, to take pictures, to buy souvenirs. To them, Bagan is a postcard. This”
David Bockino, Greetings from Myanmar

52937 Around the World in 80 Books — 30661 members — last activity 3 hours, 9 min ago
Reading takes you places. Where in the world will your next book take you? If you love world literature, translated works, travel writing, or explorin ...more
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