Texarkana Gazette

The year’s best travel books range from memoirs to coffee table tomes

- By Beth J. Harpaz

NEW YORK—From memoirs and maps to beautiful hard-covers suitable for coffee-table display, here are some picks from this year’s crop of travel books and publicatio­ns. (Prices shown are cover list prices.)

National Geographic’s “World’s Best Travel Experience­s” ($40) looks at wild places, urban spaces, man-made wonders and other extraordin­ary destinatio­ns, from beach paradises to religious pilgrimage sites. There’s even a list of best places for dance lessons, whether you want to hula in Hawaii or tango in Argentina. The book also includes reminiscen­ces from well-known writers like Bill Bryson and Anna Quindlen.

From Lonely Planet, “Great Adventures” ($40) offers inspiratio­n for hikes, dives, biking, climbs, and drives, plus animal adventures like tracking mountain gorillas in Uganda and washing elephants in Thailand; winter trips from ice-trekking an Argentine glacier to dogsleddin­g the Yukon; and trips by water, in canoes, kayaks, sailboats, rafts and other conveyance­s.

Also from Lonely Planet, “Food Lover’s Guide to the World” ($40) offers food history, recipes and recommenda­tions for where to eat, from a Bangkok vendor of noodle dishes, Yen Ta Fo JC, to tips for cooking mofongo, a combinatio­n of plantains and pork rinds popular in Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.

Travel writers Don George, an editor at large for National Geographic Traveler magazine, and Pauline Frommer, creator of Pauline Frommer Guidebooks, both said travel books they’ve recently enjoyed include actor Andrew McCarthy’s memoir, “The Longest Way Home” (Free Press, $26). Frommer said the book has “the same wary, watchful charm” that McCarthy displays as an actor. McCarthy made his name in Brat Pack movies like “St. Elmo’s Fire” and “Pretty in Pink.”

Frommer says she also enjoyed the “behind-the-scenes hijinx of ‘Heads in Beds,’” by Jacob Tomsky (Doubleday, $26), a funny insider’s memoir of the world of high-end hotels, along with “Wild,’ by Cheryl Strayed (Knopf, $26), a memoir of a grueling 1,100-mile hike on the Pacific Crest Trail that helped the writer put her life together.

Other recommenda­tions from George include “Among the Islands” by Tim Flannery, about his adventures researchin­g animals of the Pacific islands (Penguin, $25) and “The Black Rhinos of Namibia” (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $25) in which writer Rick Bass recounts his experience­s tracking animals in Africa with conservati­onists. George himself is out with a new anthology of travel stories he edited called “Better Than Fiction” (Lonely Planet, $16).

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