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Three months through so many diverse countries could easily be nothing more than a superficial jaunt. But Newsham's goal gives him and the book a purpose, for any chance encounter is significant. His stance is no longer, "What does this person want from me?" (a valid concern in countries where begging takes a hundred forms), but "What miracle might our meeting produce?" Newsham easily makes friends with his quick and quirky sense of humor and ability to elicit their wishes, truths, pains, and pleasures. He asks each person he meets--from a sadhu at the banks of the Ganges to a 110-year-old Tanzanian on the flank of Mt. Kilimanjaro--what the best and worst times in their lives have been, and the answers take us straight into their lives. While Newsham is skilled in drawing each exotic city and village, it is these meetings with strangers-quickly-turned-friends that make Take Me with You such an engrossing read.
The "round-the-world journey to invite a stranger home" plan could be just a gimmick, but Newsham is too self-aware for that. In India, he recognizes that his desire to add some small joy to someone else's life is nothing more than a frivolity amidst the masses of people sleeping under newspapers at a train station. And watching a linked line of elephants walking noiselessly across a river in Kenya, the babies' wee trunks grasping their mothers' tails, he asks himself, "How do I repay this?" Whoever ends up winning this lottery (will it be the Kenyan safari guide who saves him from the lions, the ear cleaner with his Q-tip and tweezers in the park in New Delhi, or the teenager with the boom box playing "What a Wonderful World" at Victoria Falls?), we have been blessed with a terrific travel memoir that takes us to some fascinating places and shatters plenty of assumptions along the way. --Lesley Reed
Pico Iyer (cover blurb)
"TAKE ME WITH YOU IS NO LESS THAN A PAGE-TURNER OF A TRAVEL MEMOIR." -- --MSNBC.com
MSNBC.com
"UNFAILINGLY ARRESTING AND PROVOCATIVE." -- --San Francisco Chronicle
Amazon -- Please remove the mysterious question marks from the Globe's review blurb already posted on the site... -- --Boston Globe
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I feel like I have made friends all over the world,
This review is from: Take Me with You: A Round-the-World Journey to Invite a Stranger Home (Travelers' Tales Footsteps : the Soul of Travel) (Hardcover)
While reading Take Me With You, I sometimes felt as if I were evesdropping or looking into a private conversation. In out of the way places and big cities, Newsham takes the time to get to know some incredible personalities. I realized that there are like-minded people living all over the world. Environmental concerns, family issues and dreams and desires being a major part of our lives. Whether you own half of Kenya or a 1,400 sq foot apartment in Portland, Oregon, we're all the same.Newsham tells the truth about travel. The great expectations, the letdowns, and the surprises. The feeling of dread when you realize that your trip is almost over, and soon you'll have to board the airplane back to your normal life. Everyone at some point wishes they could chuck everything, pick up a backpack and head out into the overlooked parts of the world. When that time comes in my life, I will look for Newsham's most recent book. Not since reading the Neverending Story when I was 11 years old have I been so totally engrossed and captured by a particular book. Keep up the good work Mr. Brad Newsham, I hope you sell a million copies!
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Unique Delight,
By A 54 year old reader (Edina, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Take Me with You: A Round-the-World Journey to Invite a Stranger Home (Travelers' Tales Footsteps : the Soul of Travel) (Hardcover)
I don't think I've read a book with this premise before, but I do think it captures perfectly what lies at the pure heart of the backpacking hippie revolution. When I was a college kid travelling in Morocco and Europe we judged the authenticity of each other's trips by how much time we'd spent in the company of locals. If you got invited into someone's home that was the ultimate. In "Take Me With You" the tables are turned. One local, very surprised no doubt, is invited back across the seas to visit the home of the traveler, Newsham's home. It's an irresistible scenario, expertly told. Funny, moving, thoughful, challenging. It has 50 short chapters, each introduced by a funny or poignant quote. It's a breeze to read. You want it to go on and on, but the end is perfectly satisfying. I can't recommend it more highly. Make mine five diamond-studded stars.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Around the world in search of humanity,
By
This review is from: Take Me With You: A Round-the-World Journey to Invite a Stranger Home (Paperback)
This is the type of adventure I wish I made, and the story I wish I had written about it.It's the story of a San Francisco taxi driver who wants to see the world, and share his place in it with a stranger. To do so, he maps a journey through the Phillipines, India and Africa, in search of the perfect guest. The story has all the elements of a great travel yarn: A purpose beyond the journey itself, well written details of exotic lands, a descent into our shared humanity, and a self-deprecating sense of humor. I'm inspired to travel! I may not invite someone back with me, but I'll certainly look for a new adventure to undertake. If you like Tony Hawks, you'll love Brad Newsham.
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