Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Was ik in vredesnaam maar thuisgebleven

Rate this book
De reis van je leven of levenslang? Zoals het klokje thuis tikt, tikt het op vakantie vaak niet. Als je je op reis druk loopt te maken over niets, wees dan blij dat je niet bent meegegaan met...
Als je net woeste vakantieplannen zit te maken, kan dit boek je misschien uit de droom helpen. Reis in je leunstoel! In deze afschuwelijk grappige bloemlezing vol verschrikkelijke reisverhalen vertellen 27 auteurs je waarom 'bezint eer ge begint' zo'n waardevol gezegde is.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

29 people want to read

About the author

Roger Rapoport

47 books1 follower
As a newspaper and magazine writer and aviation specialist Roger Rapoport has written in all 50 states, 6 Canadian provinces, and 30 foreign countries. A lifelong sailor and enthusiastic kayaker, he has traveled extensively throughout the Great Lakes, along the St. Lawrence Seaway and the Atlantic Coast.

Roger Rapoport graduated with a Bachelor's of Arts in Journalism in 1968 from the University of Michigan where he was editor of The Michigan Daily.

While working on a story for Ramparts Magazine he met his first wife, Margot Lind. They had a son & daughter and later divorced in 1993.

In 1978, Rapoport began to work at California newspapers, including The San Jose Mercury-News, the San Francisco Chronicle & the Oakland Tribune.

In 1991 Rapoport went to work for Ulysses Press in Berkeley learning about the publishing business.

In 1993 he launched his own publishing effort, RDR Books in Oakland, CA and has since published more than 60 books.

Rapoport met Martha Ferriby, director of Hackley Public Library, while in Michigan in 1995. They married in 2000.

Rapoport moved to Michigan in 2004.

In 2007 RDR became a defendant in the seminal fair use case J.K. Rowling. v. RDR Books, aka The Harry Potter Lexicon Case. Rapoport and Steve Vander Ark, founder of “The Harry Potter Lexicon” website had sought to publish a book version of the Vander Ark's Potter fans' website.

Author J.K. Rowling and Warner Bros. claimed copyright infringement. RDR Books claimed the right to publish under the fair use doctrine.

Although RDR lost the case, Judge Robert B. Patterson Jr. awarded the plaintiffs less than $7,000 in damages for infringement, the minimum amount possible.

Judge Patterson concluded that "reference guides in general, including the Lexicon, are transformative in nature and capable of fair use protection, and that the Lexicon could be published with less appropriation from the original works. "

On January 16, 2009, RDR Books released The Lexicon: An Unauthorized Guide to Harry Potter Fiction and Related Materials including more commentary than before the suit.
For more information see: Right to Write.

RDR Books is now closed. Most of the former RDR Book titles are now available from Ashley Creek Books.

Books written and edited by Roger Rapoport are now available from New Lake Books and Lexographic Press.

Rapoport published Steven Faulkner's Waterwalk. With Richard Harris he has since co-produced and adapted Faulkner's story for a film starring Robert Cicchini.




Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
2 (4%)
4 stars
13 (26%)
3 stars
14 (28%)
2 stars
11 (22%)
1 star
9 (18%)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Ensiform.
1,525 reviews148 followers
December 22, 2011
This book is a third sequel to a book of established writers’ travel horror stories. Here, amateur writers share their travel woes. It is, clearly, an attempt to milk a cash cow. While the writing is adequate (certainly not great), it’s the content of the stories that really makes this a useless anthology. They’re the quality of story you might tell your friends at dinner, but are in no way deserving of publication.

Examples include: I was on a plane that was delayed; I couldn’t find my car after the Super Bowl; we rented a boat and wrecked it; the service at this restaurant in England was very slow; we went to a hotel and damned if it wasn’t a fairly shabby hotel; we ate some food and got sick. There are a few stories as interesting as, say, getting hurt and experiencing Vietnam’s standard of hospital care. But mostly this is very dull, and pretty close to worthless.
1 review
December 1, 2019
This book is dull. In fact, it’s ‘sign-up-for-an-account-to-save-the-next-potential-reader’ dull.
The writing quality is mediocre at best, but that could be forgiven if the content was actually worth reading.
It is very much a collection of slightly unscheduled stuff happening to people when travelling very much on the beaten track. No, please, tell me more about how Kenyan cuisine primarily consists of rice and beans, or how your flight was a bit delayed.
Gave up after less than ten chapters.
Profile Image for John Orman.
685 reviews32 followers
April 20, 2013
An anteater served for Thanksgiving in Tasmania? Yes, that event is in here!

Liked the local color of the tale "What a View!", about a visit to a Bed and Breakfast in the Columbia River Gorge. Every 20 minutes a long train would rumble by the B & B all night, keeping the story author up. "But we have a view" the kids would keep saying.

"Day Trip to Denver" was quite a horror story of misadventures by railroad and car during a tour in which 3 meals in a row were missed by a group way behind schedule.

I hope to never have the experience related in "This is a Test" by Priscilla Burgess. During a flight over-the-pole, the cockpit broadcast a message to the travelers on board: "This plane is going to make an emergency landing in water." After the passengers panic, a clarification comes over the PA: "Sorry, please disregard that message--there is a problem with the automatic flight warning system."
What a scare that must have been, as people started preparing to meet their maker.
Profile Image for Sherri Robinson.
520 reviews2 followers
May 31, 2015
I think less time was spent editing in this book. The first book was hilarious and each story was brief but well written. This book has a endless story about a disgraced teacher in Eastern Europe. He should have been fired just for referencing a book he obviously never read. Lolita is the a book written by a pedophile and how he can trap an innocent girl, Delores, not a young temptresses like the Hollywood movies. The story's inclusion was boring and a bit disturbing but NoT funny. The rest of the stores were uneven--some charming, some funny, and some just groaners leaving you thinking, "Just because you choose to be stupid isn't charming or humorous-- like deciding to dribble a soccer ball while hiking?" Caliber of feeding a wild animal by hand for a great photo and then having to get a series of rabies shots for the bite.
Profile Image for Alessandra.
234 reviews
July 22, 2012
These people are in need of a good editor. Funny things may happen to you, but that doesn't make you a good writer...
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.