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Author Brandon Wilson and his wife Cheryl challenge the "impossible" and set off on an incredible 1000-kilometer (650-mile) odyssey on foot across Tibet. Join their adventure from Lhasa to Kathmandu, as they become the first Western couple to make this perilous trek across the unforgiving, windswept Himalayan plains.
What begins as an adventure, quickly turns into much more. Discovering that Tibetans are forbidden to trek this same pilgrim's trail, the Wilsons decide to walk it in their place-and prove to the authorities that it can be done without repercussions in China.
YAK BUTTER BLUES is a remarkable tale of survival. Alone, with only their stalwart Tibetan horse Sadhu, the Wilsons face Tibet's ruthless environment head-on: the blistering winds, extreme temperatures, sandstorms, blizzards, high altitudes and thinnest of air. Those conditions are made all the more challenging by exhaustion, hunger, illness, inflexible bureaucrats and trigger-happy soldiers.
YAK BUTTER BLUES is an inspiring story of faith and the kindness of strangers. The land and climate leave their imprints daily. However, an even more lasting impression is created by the Tibetan monks and generous villagers eager to share what little they possess: yak butter tea, the warmth of their family's fire and steadfast faith in the Dalai Lama's return.
YAK BUTTER BLUES paints a gripping portrait of a Tibetan culture pushed to the brink of extinction by Communist occupation for over fifty years.
YAK BUTTER BLUES is an intimate tale of personal enlightenment. Along the path, the couple gains a sense of greater purpose, wonder, renewed faith-and ultimately discover what it takes to endure.
Join their riveting physical, spiritual and emotional pilgrimage, through the highs and lows, across a vanishing land in this classic Tibetan tale.
"Travel has a unique way of opening your eyes, or "shifting the paradigm." Or so we found especially in Tibet. During our brief time there, we were witnesses to the heavy cloak of occupier-sponsored control and suspicion permeating all aspects of the Tibetan daily life.
While Yak Butter Blues is a tale of our survival in a sometimes-hostile land, it's also a story of survival for the average Tibetan struggling to maintain their culture, dignity and even their very existence. That is the true meaning of those "yak butter blues."
I hope that this book becomes a message in a bottle for those who showed us so much unexpected kindness, generosity and bravery in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
From Lhasa to Kathmandu,
By
This review is from: Yak Butter Blues (Paperback)
..."Look, you two, I don't think this has ever been done before-and there must be more than one good reason why."...It's a good thing author Brandon Wilson and his wife, Cheryl, didn't take these words to heart or I wouldn't have been able to go along with them on their adventure from Lhasa to Kathmandu. While I may never get there in person, I feel as though I have met the people of Tibet and seen everything they did while staying out of the freezing cold. I read this book, slowly, savoring from the first "Tashi Delek!" to the last "Namaste". I came to love Sadhu, the wandering holy man, so much that I was close to tears near the end of the story.
Traveling with Brandon and Cheryl, and the people they meet along the way and share their adventure with, for 650 miles across an ancient pilgrim's trail is exhilarating. You will enjoy the way things open up to them as minor successes happen to allow them to trek across Tibet, visiting beautiful Buddhist monasteries and passing out pictures of the Dalai Lama to those who helped them along the way. While experiencing much success, they also experienced getting shot at, getting caught in a blizzard and a sandstorm, not having enough to eat or drink, getting lost, Cheryl getting bitten by a dog, and much more. The one thing that stayed constant, besides their determination, was the Yak Butter the book is named for. ...Like Henry David Thoreau's noble quest to "live life deliberately"..."Yak Butter Blues author, Brandon Wilson, teaches us just that...open your life to adventure, seek it out, find something that suits you and jump in with both feet...don't stop to think or to over-plan. If you do, your logic could take over and you would miss all the fun! Pick up two copies of this book...one for yourself and another for a friend. You will both be glad you did. Thank you Brandon and Cheryl for sharing a once-in-a-lifetime trip!
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Yak Butter Blues by Brandon Wilson,
This review is from: Yak Butter Blues: A Tibetan Trek of Faith (Paperback)
Brandon transpoted me to Tibet and I was taken step by grueling step with him and Cheryl and their rugged Tibetan horse Sadhu on their 1000 km trek from Lhasa to Kahtmandu that they were told was impossibe.
The trip had to be completed before the mountain passes were snowed in so they had about six weeks so they had to walk eighteen miles a day on dirt roads thru tracherous mountain passes at very high altitudes encountering the unpredictable Chinese military. At the end of each day there was always a surprise lodgeing,with very meager sustenance but always they were welcomed by Tibetan families who shared what they had. This is a heart warming book that proves nothing is impossible and the human body and mind can be stretched to endure and and rewarded in ways that uplift the spirit to new heights. The Tibetan people are proof that somehow they will endure and need world support. It is a wonderful book and exciting adventure. Verna Eddy Kailua Hi
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Breathtaking Read,
This review is from: Yak Butter Blues (Paperback)
Brandon Wilson is masterful in describing the hardships and trials of his 650-mile journey across Tibet. He's equally adept at describing this harsh yet wondrous, high landscape known as the "roof of the world." Wilson is at his best, however, when he talks about the enchanting warmth of the Tibetan people who, as he and his wife crossed on foot, took them into their homes and shared their culture. Hardly a holiday sightseeing safari, Wilson calls his trek a "walking meditation" in which the couple sees through the dust storms and freezing winds to learn the good will and kindness that has survived generations of oppression. In this strange paradise, Wilson finds commonality with the Tibetans, yet mourns the continuing disappearance of their culture, noting that soon little will remain of it but their ancient yak butter tea. Fortunately, so will his book.
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