Dreaming of Jupiter is Ted Simon's return to the route that he took in 1973, a route that took him around the world. His book, Jupiter's Travels, is the iconic motorcycle travel book that has inspired other motorcycle enthusiasts including myself, to explore the world on two wheels. This book is his return to that route years later, an older and perhaps changed man.
Hesitant to buy Simon's book, I bought it out of respect for the man an the adventurer. Somehow, though, I knew what I would find; and I wasn't wrong.
"You can never go back." is a phrase that has rang true for me and I would believe for Ted Simon as well. Maybe a good alternative title? For anyone paying attention, or old enough to remember, the world has changed drastically. Yes, it has changed for the better but with the progress we have made there is also the costs. The world has gotten smaller and yet there are too many of us on this planet. There have been advances in what Simon calls "Unfinished Countries", and those advances have come at the cost of environmental and aesthetic destruction. As Simon writes, "It seems that there is no idea so good that it can't be trashed for money."
As a result of this and perhaps Simon's age, Dreaming of Jupiter is bitter sweet, a sad book in ways. And in other ways it is a truthful account of where we are at as a species. No matter what the reader takes from Simon's revisit, Dreaming of Jupiter is much more than a book about motorcycle travel. I'm not sure, but it seemed that Simon was surprised at what he found! This in itself was surprising. But his courage to revisit and experience the world "as it is" is a testament to Mr. Simon.
The book was written when Simon was nearing or had turned seventy, and it reads as such. Descriptive sadness about places that no longer exist, smattered with a few people that he knew or thought he knew, and his travels through a changed and dying landscape. Simon sums up the book with a melancholy thought:
"It is, to my mind, the overwhelming tragedy of our time that as individuals we a capable of making great changes in our lives, while as a species we stumble wide-eyed and irrevocably towards disaster."
Dreaming of Jupiter is simply that: a dream.