Editor’s note: Literature is a never ending sea of inspiration for us here at GP. As such, we’ve updated our list of best travel and adventure books with 10 new recommendations. Contribution by Peter Saltsman and Jack Seemer.
Somewhere between your morning commute and much-deserved coffee break, you probably dreamed about getting on an airplane and going somewhere (anywhere!), aching for adventure and the promise of a life well lived.
We’ve all been there, longing to see the world beyond our reach, perhaps even ready to set off for the remote and distant corners of the globe. Well, the joke’s on us. At this point, someone has probably beaten us there and no doubt almost died (or, for that matter, actually died) in the process. But man’s penchant for exploration — crazy, reckless, often death-defying exploration — has yielded some pretty good literature over the years, which is a damn good consolation prize. These are stories of conquests, scientific discovery, and jut generally of brave, often foolish men and women doing the things most of us wouldn’t dare. Sit back, read on, and thank god you don’t have to go through any of the shit that happened to them.

In Patagonia by Bruce Chatwin
In 1974, Bruce Chatwin, then a relatively unknown journalist for The Sunday Times Magazine, traveled to South America, resigning with a brief telegram mailed home that read, “Have gone to Patagonia”. Chatwin spent six months there, inspiring this travelogue. Experimental in form, the book is perhaps best classified as creative nonfiction, comprised of 97 short vignettes (ranging from factual anecdotes to folklore) of the people, places and tales he encountered during the adventure. $12

A Sense of Direction by Gideon Lewis-Kraus
Living aimlessly in Berlin, writer Gideon Lewis-Kraus jets off to attempt three historically diverse pilgrimages by foot — the Camino de Santiago in Spain, the Shikoku Pilgrimage in Japan and the Rosh Hashanah kibbutz in the Ukraine — connecting the narrative of his experiences with existential musings on life’s greater, and not so great, purposes. The result is a text author Dave Eggers calls “a very honest, very smart, very moving book about being young and rootless and even wayward”. $11