Sabtu, 12 Oktober 2013

PDF Download No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late

PDF Download No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late

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No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late

No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late


No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late


PDF Download No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late

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No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late

Review

"Halliday's irreverent, sarcastic and occasionally scatological style will remind you of a phone conversation with your best friend."―New York Magazine"I laughed hard on nearly every page of this shockingly intimate travel memoir and deeply funny book. Ayun Halliday lives an interesting life, and it's the good luck of us less daring types that she writes it so well."―Stephen Colbert"A fearless traveler with a great sense of humor, Halliday recounts her experiences with gleeful zest..."―Chicago Sun-Times"No Touch Monkey provides plenty of vicarious adventure for readers who prefer domestic beach hotels to malarial diarrhea and flip-flop-stealing primates."―Bust magazine"From her dog-eared journal, Ayun Halliday extracted the funniest scenarios and created this self-effacing rant on the humiliations of shoestring travel...Prepare to laugh out loud while commiserating with her new challenges."―Toronto Globe & Mail

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About the Author

Ayun Halliday is the creator of the East Village Inky, the 2002 Firecracker Alternative Book Award Winner for Best Zine. She is the author of several books, including The Big Rumpus, Dirty Sugar Cookies, and Zinester’s Guide to NYC. She lives in Brooklyn.

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Product details

Paperback: 272 pages

Publisher: Seal Press; 2 edition (August 25, 2015)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1580056016

ISBN-13: 978-1580056014

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 0.9 x 8.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 12.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

3.6 out of 5 stars

106 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#1,680,078 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

The cover is the best part of the book. I bought the book because one reviewer said he laughed on every page, but he must be easily amused, because I never laughed once. The author relates how she got dysentery, malaria and a dislocated knee while traveling, and how she was frightened by dogs, monkeys and prostitutes. Good travel writers can transform misfortune into interesting stories because of affection for the countries and people visited, or at least a good eye for detail. Ten minutes after reading the book, I couldn't remember any of the countries the author traveled through or any of the people she met except for one monk who liked to swim. The people she described most were her disfunctional boyfriends. The last chapter is typical, where she relates her non-adventure of staying in the hotel room with the baby while everybody else goes out and has fun. The only reason I read the whole book was because I had a back spasm and I was too uncomfortable to get up and get another book. Now I wish I had just thrown it against the wall and taken a nap instead.

i have a slight and manageable learning disability that makes reading a bit of a chore, so if a book doesn't hold my interest, i don't read it. and i read this book start to finish and enjoyed every bit of it with the exception of the author's too-evocative description of her dislocated knee (perhaps because i'm a nurse it was too easy visualize).anyway.........the style is fluid and friendly, the stories are alternately funny andevocative and it's got the ability to create the 'you were there' feeling necessary to distinguish one travel book from the hundreds of travel books written by people who shouldn't write travel books.Best praise i can offer: i'm now going to search out her other books

Excellent travel book, while I wouldn't like to travel with her I like be to read her, very funny book!

Will someone please recommend me a great female travel writer!! I am somewhat like Ayun to a small degree; have my backpacking experiences that are crazy, have had many travels on a shoestring budget, and had my share of shady characters and illnesses on the road- but she was actually kind of a boring writer who also did not always use common sense. Someone else criticized her shoestring budget or referred to her travelling as "poverty" travel. Well, I do not know her personal financial situation in the States, but most of us backpackers choose to try to see as much as we can on the road which involves staying in some dives, using sqat toilets (most non-western countries only have these) and we do have to count every penny- she was just living the life of a typical backpacker who is not travelling on her parents dime (I assume this was her situation). I have used some of her same techniques in the past to stretch my dollar such as sleeping in airports (pre-9/11), sleeping in bus stations, couch surfed, and living on the bread, yogurt, and cheese diet. I do not have to be in the Hilton to have a good time and I want to be able to keep as much of my savings for emergencies and enable myself to see as many countries as possible. However, I do agree with her critics in regards to spending her precious money on alcohol and drugs; that is just plain stupid!In my travels, I have witnessed so many fellow hostel mates who cannot seem to go a day without smoking a joint and I agree that is such a waste of money and dangerous. I do not like the attitude that I see of such types who seem to believe that because they are from the West, that they will be exempt from the law. I think that these types should watch some episodes of "Locked Up Abroad" before setting foot on the plane. She was foolish and very lucky on her journeys in this regard. I did however like her narration of those starving days on the road- the shoestring budget while watching everyone scarf down a good meal. I usually reserve my finances for a few good meals, but she would have encountered some delicious economical meals in some of the countries that she chose.I was hoping to read a funny book about the backpacker's experiences from the female perspective. Hoping she encountered some of the crazy, unique things that us women embark on- ie- marriage proposals from strangers, the need for head scarfs, cat calls, ect... but I didn't get much of that from this book. Her France trip with her mother only entailed a discussion of a fashion show and her eagerness to get home to her boyfriend. Her trip to Amsterdam was somewhat enlightening but still a bit flat. I liked reading the typical swindling that she encountered in India(glad to read someone else who also got in the same type of tourist trap). Her trip to Romania also seemed to give me some insight into the lives and culture of the Romanian college kids. However, I found myself skipping many parts and a bit bored. I was hoping for some more humor and feel for the culture and the locals. Her trip to Edinburgh only involved the discussion of her theater production and child caring problems. Over all, some of this book had a few laughs and good tips and is worth a read if you buy it used. Meanwhile, I will stick to Paul Theroux and Chuck Thompson until I can find some good female travel narratives. And yes, I have read "Whose Panties are These" and "Women's Travel Stories" 2008, and most of them were dry as well. So the search is still on!

As someone who once traveled on a beach-sleeping budget, I was very excited to see that my favorite mothering memoirist (Ayun Halliday, The Big Rumpus) had written a book about her far flung travels. It was especially a bonus that most of the travels were to places I had not quite made it to. Ayun is a traveler after my own heart, with a drive to really step off the beaten path (and sometimes tumble painfully off of it) and immerse herself in the local culture; questionable food stalls, dark alleys, remote villages and all. My favorite aspect of the writing is the author's knack for a well turned phrase: you never know what you'll get after a comma! Lots of laughs, usually. The way she adds details to a description, building up the comedy and the unexpected factor, is hilarious. I'm also game for good accounts of psychedelic experiences, and there are some crazy ones here.The author sets herself apart from the typical "omg, did you get that at Gap?" American backpacker. Her analytical musings on a variety of situations highlight the unexpected. The quest of the travels seems to be to find something that is interesting and different from the regular day to day of western existence back home. Sometimes the author finds moments of bliss in a zen-like way, in the small things; the way a sparse hotel room's walls end in latticework that continues up to the ceiling, or in a gorilla's roar. It's these moments that hit the nail on the head in terms of meeting an expectation imagined when still at home, dreaming of traveling. More often though, are the moments of anti-bliss, which illustrate the flipside of the totally foreign travel experience. The author's unflappable spirit in the face of random thieves, illnesses, and scary dogs, makes this book a giggle-inducing page turner 'til the end.

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No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late PDF

No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late PDF

No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late PDF
No Touch Monkey!: And Other Travel Lessons Learned Too Late PDF

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