Read Online Travel Anywhere And Avoid Being a Tourist Travel trends and destination inspiration for the modern adventurer Fathom Jeralyn Gerba Pavia Rosati 9781741176544 Books

By Antonio Daniels on Monday, June 3, 2019

Read Online Travel Anywhere And Avoid Being a Tourist Travel trends and destination inspiration for the modern adventurer Fathom Jeralyn Gerba Pavia Rosati 9781741176544 Books





Product details

  • Flexibound 192 pages
  • Publisher Hardie Grant (April 16, 2019)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1741176549




Travel Anywhere And Avoid Being a Tourist Travel trends and destination inspiration for the modern adventurer Fathom Jeralyn Gerba Pavia Rosati 9781741176544 Books Reviews


  • This book is not like other travel guides out there. It has sections dedicated for different types of travelers so no one is left out. The title of the book is "Travel Anywhere," and it really does cover places from all over the world. This book will open your eyes to not travel as a tourist, but travel with an open mind. With each getaway you will immerse yourself in a different culture and experience a different set of emotions than your last. You don't necessarily need to travel to the most lavish or well known places to have a great experience. How you interact with your surroundings matters more than your travel destination.

    The visuals in this book are also outstanding. There is a masterful curation of photos as each destination is accompanied by pictures that beautifully capture the essence of the location.

    I would highly recommend this book to anyone who is willing to travel with an open mind and completely unbound. It has something for every traveler and destinations that one might not usually think about when getting away. It will change the way you think about traveling. It's the only travel book you will need, trust me.
  • Such a wonderful book from the editors of Fathom! Not only does Travel Anywhere include current tips on where to go and what to do, but gives wonderful insight into how to be responsible travelers and ambassadors of the world. Travel Anywhere inspires me to dig a little deeper and go outside of my comfort zone when I travel abroad; to take that trip that I keep putting off, and to remind myself that when an opportunity arises to experience a new place or culture that I should jump with both feet and ask questions later! Such a great read.
  • I have followed the Fathomaway team for years, their site is always a first stop in my travel planning. I read the book end to end. I was happy to see the brand’s familiar, beautifully written voice in every page. The book is an insiders handbook from with your favorite, most knowledgeable, travel-obsessed friend.
  • Such a high quality book. From the incredibly useful intel down to the photos. Following both Fathom and Daniel Schwartz on instagram I can see a lot of hard work has gone into this! Thoroughly will enjoy reading this over and over again. Google flights will need to be blocked on my laptop after reading this !
  • You do not want to open “Travel Anywhere” if you have been drinking. First, you will turn down the corners of pages of destinations, hotels and restaurants that are particularly appealing. Then you will go to the Web to see what it costs to go there. And then, if you are sufficiently blitzed, you will grab a passport and rush to the airport.

    On Fathom, a site launched by Pavia Rosati and Jeralyn Gerba, they describe their goal to create “a manual for modern travelers.” Translation “We find ourselves especially drawn to destinations that feel like sanctuaries and that inspire goodwill. If you travel to recharge the senses and want to return home energized and engaged, these places will do all that—and more.”

    Like The Arctic Haven Wilderness Lodge, in the northernmost part of Canada. The Faroe Islands, in the overlooked zone between Iceland and Norway. The republic of Georgia, which was recently worthy of an entire book about its cuisine and wine. A converted monastery on an Umbrian hillside. Petit St. Vincent, a secret, but not for long. The Bamurru Plains in Australia. Who wouldn’t slow down at the section on romantic hotels? And there are four pages of general travel advice that are worth the price of the book.

    Loved the restaurants. Gasped at the photo spread of the open-air co-working space in Bali. Applauded the chapter on volunteer opportunities around the world. Wanted to go to almost every architectural destination, starting with the Fogo Island Inn in Newfoundland.

    It’s not 100% eye-opening. I yawned at the selections for “wellness travel,” though I was curious about “forest bathing.” Glamping — oh, pull-ease. There’s a list of apparently obligatory “Trips of a Lifetime” — Machu Picchu, Venice, blah blah blah. But then, a few pages later, there’s a yummy list of “Bites Worth the Distance.”

    Does it sound like a book for entitled First Worlders? Yes, they’ll love it. For the rest of us, it’s a dream book, a motivator, a very good reason to get up and go.