Traveling these days is more something that someone has to endure to get where you want to go as opposed to something to be enjoyed. More than a few of us pine for “the good old days”, where the journey was an amazing part of the travel experience. Until someone invents a time machine, Jonathan Glanchey’s book is the closest thing we’ll ever get to experiencing some of the greatest experiencing from a lost era of travel.
With meticulous research and a little imagination, Jonathan takes us back with him to experience some of the best travel experiences of the twentieth century, like traveling across the Atlantic on the Normandie, flying down to Rio on the airship Graf Zeppelin, flying from Southampton to Singapore by flying boat, and traveling by steam train from London to Scotland and New York to Chicago. Some of the journeys might have been more mundane in their day, such as traveling by train to a far-flung corner of Ireland or going to the outskirts of London by an original double-decker bus, but even those journeys take us to a world that has long since vanished. In more contemporary times, Jonathan shares his own real-life experiences, like traveling through Iraq prior to the overthrow of Saddam Hussein to visit ancient ruins, traveling to remote areas of Poland and China to still see steam trains at work, or taking his dog on a ferry cruise from Germany to Finland on one of the last ships to allow dogs to accompany human passengers. Each journey represents a visit to a time and place that is now out of reach, and each leaves you wondering what we lost in the name of progress.
Jonathan’s journeys, both real and imagined, are fascinating, featuring encounters with real-life characters who help us appreciate the journeys we’re taking and the conveyances that are taking us there. Jonathan manages to inform the reader without bogging him or her down in minutiae, and at the end of each piece provides an update of the fate of the place or conveyance featured.
Is getting there no longer half the fun of travel? We may never know for sure, but Jonathan Glanchey wants us a to gain a greater appreciation for making the journey - because some day, we may not be able to travel that way anymore. Recommended!