An intelligent, humorous travel tale that is also the story of a tender father-son relationship from ABC Local Radio's legendary broadcaster Jon Faine. 'Somehow, I convinced myself it was a good idea. Somehow, I convinced myself that it was do-able. Now I shake my head... We drove through the Gobi desert in Mongolia in a snowstorm, avoided an Iranian sedan doing cartwheels on the freeway near tehran, wove around the shores of the Caspian Sea and navigated the desert in turkmenistan. We learned to say thank you in thirty languages and dispensed fluffy koalas to traumatised small children in obscure mountain pockets from Laos to Kurdistan. We kicked an Aussie Rules footy across borders and taught customs officers how to do a drop-punt from timor Leste to Uzbekistan. We ate bark and ox blood and worms and pigs ears and eel and curries so hot we nearly fell off our chairs. We bribed police in five countries, ignored parking tickets in another six and got lost pretty much everywhere. We squabbled over food and farting, snoring and sneezing. It was total folly and it was the best thing you can ever do. I would do it again and I would not recommend it to anyone.' In April 2008, Jon Faine and his son Jack closed their door on their Melbourne home and leaving jobs, studies, family and friends, took six months and went overland to London in their trusty 4-wheel-drive. this intelligent and funny recount of the countries they visited, people they met and trouble they got into, is also the story of a tender father-son relationship.
I might not agree at times with his stance on various political issues but this was a good read well worth the effort and really to do all that is worth applauding
I have been listening to the audio book version of this book in the car for the past few weeks and I borrowed the real book version from the library yesterday so that I could look at the photos. It was good getting hold of the book and looking at the photos as they refreshed my memory about some of the things that are described in the book. For example, when John fed a bull elephant a banana in Sumatra through the window of the car and realised pretty quickly that what he had done was "monumentally stupid" when the elephant wouldn't move away from the car and seemed to be demanding more bananas.
I really love John Faine after listening to him on the radio for many years. The trip him and his son, Jack, went on a couple of years ago is really interesting to learn about but I feel that John really does need to chillax a bit. A bit too much of the book is about him stressing about the difficulties they have getting visas, and so on.
I really liked the parts of the book that Jack wrote as he writes in a very poetic and beautiful way. I think the best chapter is the one that Jack wrote about spending a night in Ashgabat, the capital of Turkmenistan, with some drunk people around his own age — late teens, early twenties — while John was sick with a stomach bug. This chapter is really moving and poignant.
Other favourite and very moving parts are the descriptions of their thoughts and feelings when they visited Balibo in Timor-Leste; their comments and thoughts about Iran and their description of how moving it was to visit Gallipoli. Jack writes at the beginning of chapter 40 that "I thought Gallipoli would be a wank. A patriotic and sickening tribute to the soldiers who courageously died for us, a vital moment in the history of Australia and our coming of age and all that crap. Instead, I cried".
An enjoyable read about a road trip that I would like to do, but I would like to do it in company as done in this book; not alone, as done recently by a friend of my niece, who drove from London to Australia, alone. I would also like one in the group to be good with car mechanics. It would likely be the 'trip of the lifetime'.