Monday, October 08, 2007

Review of "Don Quixote in China: The Search for Peach Blossom Spring," by Dean Barrett

There is a special joy in being recommended a book you are currently reading while being given a book you intended to buy. Such was my luck when Dean Barrett, whose Murder in China Red and Skytrain to Murder I previously enjoyed, mailed me Dragon Slayer and suggested that I read Don Quixote in China: The Search for Peach Blossom Spring.


A Travelogue


Don Quixote follows author Bean Barrett's travels in southern China in search of the Chinese version of Shangi-La. While I've only been to two of the cities Dean traveled in (Shenzhen and Zhongshan), much of what he mentioned rang through. From western breakfasts at hotels, the bizarre Chinese-market logo of Haier, and adventures on trains, Dean has clearly been-there and done-that. The landscapes of Don Quixote are not as romantic as in Barrett's other books (such as Bangkok Warriors or Kingdom of Make Believe), though I wonder if it's because I'm more familiar with China than Thailand.

Unlike fiction writers, travel writers are confined in their characterization by what actual people actually disclose. Too many of the folks that Barrett meets in his journey are described only in outline. While again this is understandable, the reader wants to learn more than is ever presented.

I have never read Cervantes' Don Quixote, and if I had I imagine I would not have found references to the original so distracting. Barnett is an excellent writer, but the humorous references to the text took away from the broader narrative and hurt the book.

Don Quixote in China is an appropriate volume for anyone seeking to complete a Dean Barrett library. However, better books by Barrett -- and more enjoyable travelogues -- are available.

Amazon.com both sells the book and has a list of positive reviews. The introduction to Don Quixote in China is available online.

Sunday, July 23, 2006

How Many Electoral Votes Have You Earned Travelling?

While I was in Fort Wayne, my friend Biz suggested that I calculate the states I had visited. He says that a state only counts as visited if one had mingled among the local people by buying some thing, and that airports did not count. I thus looked online for a clickable states visited map, and I was unimpressed with what was available. So I used a clickable electoral college map similar to the one I used for my analysis of the West Wing election


tdaxp has been in 279 electoral votes worth of states (plus one district!)


While I have an absolute electoral votes without them, I have included Mississippi, Tennessee, and Georgia as "undecided." Like every other American I have spent time in Atlanta's airport, I drove through Tennessee on my recent interesting adventure, and was previously in a bus in Mississippi.

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Leaving Nacogdoches

Leaving Nac, East Texas today. No posts until tomorrow evening at the earliest.

Thought: Texas considers itself a country. How does this affect immigrants? Is Texas's assertiveness contributing to its relative ease in assimilating immigrants, especially when compared against California?

Mindi and Damion, you are good friends. Rob, I love you as a brother.

11:20 Posted in Vanity | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email this | Tags: Nacogdoches, texas, travel

Sunday, March 13, 2005

Texas is like a Country

Texas Trip Update:

In Texas, the state flag shares pride of place with the American flag. It's shocking. And Texan heroes are venerated like the South remembers Confederates or anyone else remembers Americans.