European Travel Books
European Travel Books > General > Europe from a Backpack: Real Stories from Young Travelers Abroad

Europe from a Backpack: Real Stories from Young Travelers Abroad (From a Backpack series)

Europe from a Backpack: Real Stories from Young Travelers Abroad (From a Backpack series)

Buy this book from Amazon.com

List Price: $15.95
Amazon.com Price: $11.16
You Save: $4.79

Other books you may find interesting

Reviews by readers

Good reading prep for trip!

Great stories, and helped me to grasp a perspective from travelers experiencing culture shock, or other first experiences that exist in travel.

Great essay collection

Europe from a Backpack is just plain good travel writing. It is pure nostalgia and is sure to inspire fond memories in anyone who has traveled the country. On the other hand, it can serve as an inspiration to armchair travelers, or an underground guide to places off the beaten track. If nothing else, this collection should inspire any traveler to record their memories in a journal. At the very least, take away the lesson that a few unforgettable travel anecdotes are far superior to a collection of a hundred of photo slides to torture your friends and family with.

The collection is divided into twelve chapters by region--Spain, the UK, France, Germany, Italy, and so on. Stories focus on the hazards of a pilgrimage, on fleeting friendships formed in small cafes, on opulent stays with exchange families, and most of all, on the rare chance to fully experience local culture.

Read this with a notepad in hand, because you will not only want to jot down the must-see sights and experiences, but the advice imparted by the book. Reading stories of travelers' sticky situations will provide the reader wisdom that comes only from hindsight.

Missed the mark

I bought this book recently because I miss traveling and will not be able to head back over to Europe for a few months. I figured, if I can't go myself, I might as well live vicariously through someone else's travels. Unfortunately I opted out of re-reading Under the Tuscan Sun and sacrificed good writing for tales of American teenagers romping around Europe. I enjoyed about every other essay in this book, mainly because half of them were written by responsible, respectable Americans who had genuinely interesting stories to tell. The other half were tales of Americans criticizing foreign cultures, staying up all night drinking and partying, and being deceitful when faced with law enforcement. I wanted to read about people's experiences with European cultures and how they transformed their lives, not their spring break partying. I can forgive the poor writing, but to be honest, some of the content of this book upset me - do young Americans really behave this way? No wonder we have such a reputation.

Top of page

Southern EuropeNorthern EuropeCentral EuropeEastern Europe
Authors