Travel Journal


Book Description

Your #1 Journal for writing your Life's Journey. This blank 150 page journal will jump start your creativity with its minimal design and bright white pages. It can be used for writing notes, as a diary, notebook to write down the places you visit important information. This Blank Lined Journal is a perfect gift for all occasions




Travel is the Only Thing You Buy that Makes You Richer


Book Description

6x9 inches 100 pages dot grid Travel Journal with Writing Prompts This 6x9 travel journal is the perfect size for documenting memories of your trips and vacations. For each day you'll find a series of writing prompts to help you capture the details as well as a blank dot grid page for additional journalling, illustrations or pasting in photographs or memorabilia from your trip. Add to Cart Now This diary is perfect for travellers who want to journal about their experiences, the places they visit and the people they meet. Features: Writing prompts Dot grid pages for journaling or saving memorabilia and photographs Product Description 6x9 inches 100 pages - dot grid paper Uniquely designed matte cover High quality, heavy paper If you're looking for this journal in another color or cover design click on "Author Name" just below the title of this book to see what else we have available.




Travel Journal for Children


Book Description

The Travel Journal for Children allows you to collect memories of your travels, from weekends away to adventures which have shaped and revolutionised your life The Travel Journal for Children and Wish List sections allow you to collect all your dreams of past and future holidays. In the introductory pages you will find practical suggestions and tools such as a detailed planning of your travels You can record 5 long trips; you can write your travel daily plans and easily organise yourself to checklists, suggestions on places not to be missed and budgets. Use the blank pages to collect photographs, tickets, maps and memories of a trip which has just finished The notebook will become your Travel Journal for Children, to keep the memories of your adventures. Store it on your shelf along with guides and memories from your favourite trips




Page-A-Day Travel Artisan Journal


Book Description

176 lined pages. 5" wide x 7" high (12.7 cm wide x 17.8 cm high). Bookbound, faux leather cover. Ribbon bookmark. Elastic band place holder. Acid-free, archival paper. Inside back cover pocket. Add elegance to your writing with these beautiful journals, featuring intricate designs, decorative stitching, and embossing on faux leather. A page a day for memorable places you visited.




Travel Planner


Book Description

This Travel Planner is perfect for planning all your next vacations & trips. If you love to plan your vacations out, this log book is a must have. This book has enough room for 8 trips, whether it's spending your days camping & hiking with family, going to Paris with friends or just sight seeing & having fun on an adventure with your kids or wherever you plan to go. Each trip has space for including: Travel Destination - Location Information. Vacation Summary - Date, Country, City, Climate, Passport/ Visa & Notes. Things To Pack - Make your own Packing List with check boxes. Itinerary - Date, Place, Hotel. Transportation Details - Departure Date & Time, Return Date & Time, Estimate Expense, Mode of Transportation, Actual Expense & Comments. Places To See & Activities - Make your own lists of Places To See & Activities with check boxes (Bucket List) Foods To Try - Make your own list of foods you would like to try. Souvenirs To Buy - Make your own list of souvenir ideas you need to buy. Highlights & Unforgettable Memories - Blank lined so you can write the highlights & memories of your trip. Pages To Attach Photos, Tickets, Receipts, Draw Sketches & Other Memorabilia - A place to glue, tape or staple your memorabilia that you want to keep. These journals also will make an awesome gift for anyone who is an organizer and loves traveling & taking adventures. Great for women and men alike. Journaling & writing about your trip has never been so easy. Size of 6x9 inches makes it convenient to take with you daily every day on your trip. Great for any trip. Easy to use. Size is 6x9 inches, 108 page, soft matte finish cover, white paper, paperback. Get one today!




Richard Wright


Book Description

In this minutely detailed, comprehensive chronology, Toru Kiuchi and Yoshinobu Hakutani document the life in letters of the greatest African American writer of the twentieth century. The author of Black Boy and Native Son, among other works, Wright wrote unflinchingly about the black experience in the United States, where his books still influence discussions of race and social justice. Entries are documented by Wright's journals, articles, and other works published and unpublished, as well as his letters to and from friends, associates, writers and public figures. Part One covers Wright's life through the year 1946, the period in which he published his best-known work. Part Two covers the final fifteen years of his life in exile, a prolific period in which he wrote two novels, four works of nonfiction, and four thousand haiku. Each part begins with a historical and critical introduction.




Seductive Journey


Book Description

For centuries, France has cast an extraordinary spell on travelers. Harvey Levenstein's Seductive Journey explains why so many Americans have visited it, and tells, in colorful detail, what they did when they got there. The result is a highly entertaining examination of the transformation of American attitudes toward French food, sex, and culture, as well as an absorbing exploration of changing notions of class, gender, race, and nationality. Levenstein begins in 1786, when Thomas Jefferson instructed young upper-class American men to travel overseas for self-improvement rather than debauchery. Inspired by these sentiments, many men crossed the Atlantic to develop "taste" and refinement. However, the introduction of the transatlantic steamship in the mid-nineteenth century opened France to people further down the class ladder. As the upper class distanced themselves from the lower-class travelers, tourism in search of culture gave way to the tourism of "conspicuous leisure," sex, and sensuality. Cultural tourism became identified with social-climbing upper-middle-class women. In the 1920s, prohibition in America and a new middle class intent on "having fun" helped make drunken sprees in Paris more enticing than trudging through the Louvre. Bitter outbursts of French anti-Americanism failed to jolt the American ideal of a sensual, happy-go-lucky France, full of joie de vivre. It remained Americans' favorite overseas destination. From Fragonard to foie gras, the delicious details of this story of how American visitors to France responded to changing notions of leisure and blazed the trail for modern mass tourism makes for delightful, thought-provoking reading. "...a thoroughly readable and highly likable book."—Deirdre Blair, New York Times Book Review




Travels with a Writing Brush


Book Description

A rich, exquisite and original anthology that illuminates Japanese travel writing over a thousand years 'Oh journey upon journey, my life is a brief moment, and I cannot hope that we will meet again' Roaming over mountains and along perilous shores, this anthology illuminates over a thousand years of Japanese travel writing. It takes in songs, diaries, tales and poetry, and ranges from famous works including The Pillow Book and the works of Basho to pieces such as the diary of a young girl who longs to return to the capital and her beloved books, or the writings of travelling monks who sleep on pillows of grass. Together they illuminate a long literary tradition, with intense poetic experience at its heart. Translated and edited with an introduction by Meredith McKinney




The Times That Try Men's Souls


Book Description

A compelling, intimate history of the Revolutionary period through a series of charismatic and ambitious familes, revealing how the American Revolution was, in many ways, a civil war. “Posterity! You will never know, how much it cost the present Generation, to preserve your Freedom! —John Adams to Abigail Adams, 26 April 1777 All wars are tragic, but the "revolutionary generation" paid an exceptionally personal price. Foreign wars pull men from home to fight and die abroad leaving empty seats at the family table. But the ideological war that forms the foundation of a civil war also severs intimate family relationships and bonds of friendship in addition to the loss of live on the battle fields. In The Times That Try Men's Soul, Joyce Lee Malcolm masterfully traces the origins and experience of that division during the American Revolution—the growing political disagreements, the intransigence of colonial and government officials swelling into a flood of intolerance, intimidation and mob violence. In that tidal wave opportunities for reconciliation were lost. Those loyal to the royal government fled into exile and banishment, or stayed home to support British troops. Patriots risked everything in a fight they seemed destined to lose. Many people simply hoped against hope to get on with ordinary life in extraordinary times. The hidden cost of this war was families and dear friends split along party lines. Samuel Quincy, Josiah Quincy’s only surviving son, sailed to England, abandoning his father, wife, and three children. John Adam’s dearest friend, Jonathan Sewell, fled with his family to England after his home was stormed by a mob. Sewell’s sister-in-law was married to none other than John Hancock. James Otis’s beloved wife Ruth was a wealthy Tory. One daughter would marry a British Army captain and spend the rest of her life abroad while the other wed major general in the Continental Army. The pain of husbands divided from wives, fathers from children, sisters and brothers from each other and close friends caught on opposite sides in the throes of war has been explored in histories of other American wars, yet Malcolm reveals how this conflict reaches into the heart of our country's foundation. Loyalists who fled to England became strangers in a strange land who did not fit into British society. They were Americans longing for home, wondering whether there would—or could—be reconciliation. The grief of separated loyalties is an important and often ignored part of the revolutionary war story. Those who risked their lives battling the great British empire, and those who left home loyal to the government were all caught in a war without an enemy. In his rough draft of the Declaration of Independence Thomas Jefferson reflected sadly that “we might have been a free and a great people together.” The Times That Try Men's Souls is a poignant and vivid narrative that provides a fresh and timely perspective on a foundational part of our nation's history.




Adventures of an Ordinary Man


Book Description