Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Recommend basic travel books.

Recommend basic travel books.

1, the complete works of Linda

Living in America-"Looking at America Close Up" series, traveling to France-taking a book to Paris, traveling to Spain-Spanish Travel Notes. Linda's writing is concise, beautiful and insightful. Starting from the details of life, she is good at telling stories and writing about history, society and culture. It is very attractive to read and has a strong sense of substitution. Through these stories, the author expresses his distinct view of history, that is, the view of human nature.

2. China Trilogy

Peter Hessler's three books, Finding the Way in China, Jiangcheng and Oracle Bone Inscriptions, write a different China. With keen observation, in-depth investigation and long-term local life, his China became strange to us in China and opened another world.

3. On the journey

Jack Kerouac's novel is regarded as a classic by backpackers and tells the story of a group of young people driving across the American continent. What impressed me deeply was that they were muddleheaded, spiritually empty and bohemian, reveling and laughing all the way, which was a record and portrayal of the hippie movement and this "beat generation" in the United States in the 1960s.

4. Crossing the Middle East for 100 years

From past lives, Ottoman Turkey split into various religious extremist organizations (such as Hamas and Islamic State) after World War I, and from Lebanon to Israel, its logic was clear and fluent, and its writing style was good. There is also a similar book, A Journey to the Great Middle East. Zhang Xingang, the author, has been to more than a dozen countries in the Middle East. As an introductory book to understand the Middle East, this book is not bad.

5, "regardless of things, travel to Europe"

Bill Brett traveled around Europe in the early 1970s. Twenty years later, he decided to relive the journey he had traveled when he was young-so he packed his bags, took old maps and guidebooks, set out from Oslo, went to Hammerfest, the northernmost city in Europe, and then passed through France, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Yugoslavia and Bulgaria, and finally arrived in Istanbul. This trip made this book a masterpiece of Bill Brighton.