Store News

October 11th, 2009

October Events

We have several special events planned this month, including evening presentations, Saturday morning group events, our 33rd annual anniversary sale, and the start of the Wide World Book Club for armchair travelers.  While our evening events usually occur on Tuesdays, this month we have a special event planned on Wednesday, October 28:  Travels with Art Wolfe, world renowned photographer and host of the PBS series.  We hope to see you this month - here’s what’s planned:

Tuesday, Oct. 6th, 7 pm  - A Geyser of One’s Own:  Five Ways to Enjoy Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks While Simultaneously Avoiding 3 Million Other People with author Brian Kevin
Each year, hordes of otherwise intrepid travelers take a pass on Yellowstone for fear of encountering traffic jams, glitzy neon tourist-traps, and fanny-pack armies.  This is a big mistake.  Brian Kevin, author of Fodor’s Compass American Guides: Yellowstone & Grand Teton National Parks, dishes on off-season secrets, overlooked trails, and other ways to explore greater Yellowstone without a few million of your best friends. 

Tuesday, Oct. 13th, 7 pm  - An Evening in Africa with Wes Krause
Join Mountain Madness co-founder Wes Krause on Kilimanjaro and in the Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater.  An expert in high altitude climbing in Alaska and the Himalayas, Wes was co-leader with Scott Fischer for the 1987 American Everest North Face Expedition. Wes later moved to East Africa where he worked for several years as the Director of the NOLS in Kenya.  During this time, he and Fischer made the second successful climb of the Breach Icicle on Kilimanjaro, pioneered the Shira Plateau route up Kilimanjaro, and developed new walking safaris. Join Wes as he reminisces about past adventures and describes new ones waiting for you!

Tuesday, Oct. 20th, 7 pm - Chasing Waves:  A Surfer’s Tale of Obsessive Wandering with author Amy Waeschle
With a verve for travel and an addiction to the ocean, Northwest native Amy Waeschle explores her lust for surfing in her new book.  Hunting down waves in remote corners of the world, from Morocco to Fiji to Canada, Waeschle has found unique and fascinating cultures that have changed her views and fostered her surfing mission.  Chasing Waves is her collection of interrelated stories based on these adventures and a chronicle of her evolution from nervous newbie to self-confident and skillful surfer.  Anyone who has ever longed for a daring diversion from their day job will connect with these tales of wanderlust, vagabonding, and riding the surf.  

Tuesday, Oct. 27th, 7 pm - Go The Second Mile: Volunteer Vacations with author Leigh Buchan
Join Leigh Buchan for an inspirational evening, experiencing the people and the culture of communities around the world while working alongside them. See what we do after hiking into a remote historically Tibetan village of Yunnan Province, China, high in the Himalayas.  Visit with us to a Rwandan village of genocide survivors of widows and orphans as they seek to develop a trade to support themselves. Find great camaraderie among the Batwa students of Burundi, Africa, as we support their learning experience with English or computer skills or agriculture-whatever they need. Work with us and laugh with us along side the world’s poor as we partner with them to bring meaningful change to their lives and to ours.

Wednesday, Oct. 28th, 7 pm - Travels to the Edge with Art Wolfe
Explore some of the world’s most intriguing places with renowned photographer Art Wolfe during this very special event.  From majestic glaciers and expansive deserts to elusive wildlife, teeming rain forest, and tribal gatherings, Art will present an intimate yet stunning selection of his favorite images, captured on location while traveling for his program Art Wolfe’s Travels to the Edge, as see on PBS.

Ongoing Monthly Events

Saturday, October 3, 9 am - Solo Travelers
Join us for an informal gathering of travelers as they meet and learn from each other’s travel experiences and share wisdom learned on the road.  This group meets each month on the 1st Saturday.

Thursday, October 15th, 7-8:30 pm - Armchair Traveler’s Book Club:  The Kindness of Strangers
Join us for our monthly travelers book club for a lively discussion of this month’s selection, The Kindness of Strangers, a collection of original stories by acclaimed travel writers, including Pico Iyer, Tim Cahill, Simon Winchester, Dave Eggers, and Alice Waters.  These 26 tales explore the “unexpected human connections that often transfigure and transform the experience of travel, and celebrates the gift of kindness around the world”.  Readers attending this inaugural meeting will have a hand in deciding the books for upcoming meetings.  The club meets each month on the 3rd Thursday; the book club selection for the month will be 20% off.

Saturday, October 17, 9 am - Gutsy Women
This informal gathering is for women to meet and learn from each other’s travel experiences and share wisdom learned on the road. Bring your coffee and your questions!  This group meets each month on the 3rd Saturday.

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June 15th, 2009

Geography Quiz 2009

To close out our 10th season of events, we recently had our annual Geography Quiz. Here it is for you.  See how you do. Answers will be posted next month. Good luck!

1. Amongst geologists, it is generally agreed that the Grand Canyon is approximately how old?

2. On an average day, how many vehicles cross the Brooklyn Bridge?

  1. 75,000
  2. 100,000
  3. 140,000
  4. 200,000

3. World Capitals: Match the country with its capital:

  • Turkey
  • Madagascar
  • Romania
  • Senegal
  • Nicaragua
  • Dakar
  • Managua
  • Ankara
  • Antananarivo
  • Bucharest

4. The Tatras mountains are part of what larger mountain range?

  1. Alps
  2. Pyrenees
  3. Carpathians
  4. Urals

5. Since the 16th century Cochin Jews, also called Malabar Jews, have lived in which Asian country?

6. In what century were official Franco-Japanese relations started by a Samuri (Hasekura Tsunenaga who was also among the first Japanese to visit North America) visiting Saint-Tropez?

  1. 15th
  2. 16th
  3. 17th
  4. 18th

7.The “General Council of the Valleys” is the name of what European Micro nation’s 28 member parliament?

8. What is the most common street name in the USA?

9. Which city has the most taxis? Bonus point - how many?

10. What is the most common surname in the world?

11. In what time zone are the north and south poles?

12. Which place in South America is part of the EU and uses the Euro?

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June 15th, 2009

Terrell’s Front Table Books

I approached the Front Table this month thinking I’d see the beginnings of the summer blockbuster publishing blast: a Maeve Binchy, a Carol Higgins Clark, maybe even a new Dan Brown. Instead I found a selection of interesting non-fiction and two intriguing novels by first-time authors. And all of them would make great “pre-trip” reading for your summer travels.

Planning to take advantage of the improved exchange rates with a trip to France this summer? Eiffel’s Tower by Jill Jonnes offers not only the back story on the construction of Paris’ iconic landmark but a social history of the era that produced it. Built as the centerpiece of the 1889 World’s Fair, the tower was an engineering marvel, the tallest structure in the world although the design was immediately reviled by a society on the brink of the modernist revolution. The fair was a showcase of all that was new with art represented by still controversial impressionists like Gaugin and Whistler and technology on display with Thomas Edison’s phonograph as well as Otis’ elevators in the tower itself. Jonnet’s prose is full of the same vibrant energy that typified the fair and the time. This is a wonderful way to learn about the Belle Epoque France that still so influences French identity. ($27.95)

If your European travels will take you further south, take a ride with Matthew Fort in Sweet Honey, Bitter Lemons: Travels in Sicily on a Vespa. These days a well-known food writer for Britain’s The Guardian, Fort originally traveled through Sicily with his brother in 1973. Considerably older now and hopefully wiser, he decided to retrace some of his steps and take some new ones, seeing the changes thirty odd years makes in a place we often think of as unchanging. The glorious food of the island was a central theme of both journeys, and we are treated to entertaining explorations into the relative merits of the sausages of rival villages and the million varieties of honey-sweetened pastries. Fortunately, he also includes recipes. As in his previous book, Eating up Italy, Fort captures our Italian fantasy trip with sunshine, history, a hip little Vespa scooter and fantastic food. ($24.95)

Hungary doesn’t seem the obvious choice for a first novel setting by a Brooklyn-born, Atlanta resident but Marc Fitten’s move to Eastern Europe as a twenty-something student has given him wonderful material for Valeria’s Last Stand. Set in a small village so far off the beaten path that World War II passed it by unnoticed, the novel centers on the late life romance between the spinster Valeria, a feisty character who thrives on her neighbor’s scorn while growing the area’s most perfect vegetables, and the widowed potter. As one would expect in a small town, the intimate relations of long-time neighbors add complications to the romance but love wins over all. Fitten uses the ancient traditions of the folk tale to tell his story, giving it a ring of authenticity, bringing in the iconic characters one would expect to meet in such a village. This is a sweet, funny, earthy look at a culture that deserves the attention. ($24.00)

Anyone traveling to Turkey or the Middle East or Central Asia or even Indonesia should consider reading Destiny Disrupted: A History of the World through Islamic Eyes by Tamim Ansary. Most of us raised in the Western educational system got only the most glancing view of the history of the great Islamic empires, often in a slightly disparaging way. Ansary’s book begins with Mohammed and his immediate successors, moves on to the concept of caliphates (quick, define caliphate for me) and then tells of the Moguls, the Selcuks, and other great Islamic civilizations that many Americans know very little about. He also explains how little most of those societies knew or cared about European history and how that has lead to much of our current situation of mutual misunderstanding and disrespect. Written in simple, readable language, this quick overview of Islamic history gives us a fuller understanding of our world. ($26.95)

For those of you who would prefer not to be tied to any particular spot on the planet, there’s another eat your way around the world book on the Front Table this month. What makes this one worth reading? Well, Simon Majumdar is part of that new phenomenon, the blogger turned published author. His new book, Eat My Globe, grew out of the blog he and his brother write that mostly reviews London restaurants. As Majumdar explains in the prologue, his entire family are foodies of the most extreme kind and his personal mantra is “go everywhere, eat everything.” Sounds good to me. With support from the bloggo-verse, the author did just that, he went everywhere he could think of and ate whatever was most typical, most highly recommended or just plain weird enough to be interesting. Chapters are short, breezy, funny, and completely food centered. I admit, I’ve already made notes of the restaurants he visited in Buenos Aires. ($26.00)

And finally, my favorite of the bunch, the cross country road trip as whimsically presented in another first novel, The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet by Reif Larsen. Tecumseh Sparrow Spivet (I’m already sold just from the name) is a precocious twelve-year-old living on a ranch in Montana with his scientist mother and cowboy father. He obsessively chronicles everything in his life in “maps,” drawings that depict everything from the layout of his bedroom to the path of a working dung beetle, many of which are presented in the margins with T.S.’s explanatory notes. Awarded a prize by the Smithsonian, he hops a freight train and heads to Washington D.C.to collect it, a trip that inspires deep philosophizing on the nature of man, travel, destiny and the world. This is an inventive and entertaining novel with a charming main character. I’d take this one over a new Dan Brown any time. ($27.95)

Enjoy the start of the sunny months!

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June 2nd, 2009

June Events

Wide World usually takes the summer off for in-store events but in June a couple of things are happening here that we invite you all to attend.

Wednesday, June 10th, 7pm
Travels with Willie: Adventure Cyclist with author Willie Weir

Local Seattle guy, world traveler, frequent KUOW contributor and avid recycler Willie Weir joins us to celebrate his latest book, Travels with Willie. It is a book is about finding adventure & facing fear, embarrassing blunders & language barriers, ice cream & kindness, the world’s steepest street & the world’s cheapest engagement ring, catching a thief & losing a zebra, a father’s touch & a farmer’s embrace, buying time & spending another night. And, of course, it’s about bicycles. Please join us tonight when we listen, learn, and laugh with the energetic and entertaining Willie Weir as he performs his stories from the road.

Saturday, June 20th, 9-10am
Gutsy Women

Back by popular demand for the month of June, we are hosting our informal gathering for women to meet and learn from each other’s travel experiences and share wisdom learned from the road. Bring your coffee and your questions!

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May 4th, 2009

Where the Hell is Matt? Here’s Right Here.

Join us on May 19th at 7pm as we welcome Matt Harding back to the store.

Matt, the YouTube sensation with more than 20,000,000 views, has just published a book of the story behind his dancing/traveling phenomenon.  Dancing Matt Around the World, a celebration of his arm- swinging, knee-pumping, infectious dance of joy, is a full-color travelogue with a behind the scenes look at the places and people he has met and its affect on him. Put on your happy feet, come travel the world and leave touched by Matt’s zest for life.

To learn more about what’s going on at Wide World, check out our other upcoming events.

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May 1st, 2009

Terrell’s Front Table Books

I can tell it’s not summer yet. The sky is still gray. The temperatures are still below sixty. And while Opening Day and the log boom ritual may be scheduled for this weekend, the quality literature arriving on the Front Table tells me that we still haven’t reached beach reading season. We’ve got one more month to enjoy thought provoking novels and informative non-fiction before the arrival of the sun distracts us and lures us to more frivolous pursuits. (more…)

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April 19th, 2009

May Events

May 5th Tuesday 7pm
Silk Road Journey From Xi’an to Kashgar with Lisa Song, Red Lantern Journeys

Roughly half of China—the western half— seems to bear about as much resemblance to classic China as Chicago does to Santa Fe. The fascination and mystery that drew the adventurers of old still attracts modern-day travelers to these far-flung regions of China. We’ll journey from Xian to Kashgar to explore the ancient Silk Road; see the relics and remnants of the past; and capture the breath-taking views of the remote deserts and mountains. Join Lisa Song from Red Lantern Journeys to share enchanting stories and sceneries of the legendary Silk Road.

May 12th Tuesday 7pm
Hiking Northern Greece with Walking Softly Tours

Discover the mountains of northern Greece! In the “hidden” region of Zagori you’ll find a landscape filled with lovely mountain villages connected by a network of stone-tiled pathways and bridges. Here also you’ll see high country meadows ablaze with crocus and ringed by towering limestone peaks along with one of the deepest gorges in the world. Thrill to the spectacle of the monasteries of Meteora perched precariously atop towering sandstone pinnacles. You’ll also have an opportunity to climb to the summit of Mount Olympus, legendary home of the Greek gods and the highest point in Greece. Your guides tonight are John and Amy Osaki, founders of Walking Softly Tours.

May 16th Saturday 9am
Solo Travelers

Join us for an informal gathering of travelers as they meet and learn from each other’s travel experiences and share wisdom learned on the road. Whether you’re preparing for your first solo journey or your hundredth, you’ll enjoy sharing your adventures with your fellow sojourners. Bring your coffee and your questions!

May 19th Tuesday 7pm
Dancing Matt Around the World with author Matt Harding

Matt Harding, the YouTube sensation with more than 20,000,000 views, has just published a book of the story behind his dancing/traveling phenomenon. Dancing Matt Around the World, a celebration of his arm- swinging, knee-pumping, infectious dance of joy, is a full-color travelogue with a behind the scenes look at the places and people he has met and its affect on him. Put on your happy feet, come travel the world and leave touched by Matt’s zest for life.

See Matt on YouTube or his website.

May 26th Tuesday 7pm
Our Annual Slides & Tell with Geography Quiz & Prizes!

Yes, tonight we wrap up our 10th season of WWB presentations and that means it’s time for Slides & Tell, where YOU get to be the star of the show. We invite customers to bring in five slides or digital images in a projectable format and the story that goes with them. We’ll also have our annual geography quiz complete with BIG prizes. Just call ahead so we know how many to plan for and where you’ll be taking us. We can answer any questions about using our digital projector. 206-634-3453 or email us at travel@speakeasy.net. Come, be part of the fun!

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April 1st, 2009

Terrell’s Front Table Books

I’ve been so caught up in planning my upcoming trip to Argentina that it was almost a relief to take a look at this month’s Front Table and be reminded that there are so many other places in the world to think and read about. While I’ve been focusing on South America, great authors have been writing about Asia and England and Africa and more. (more…)

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March 2nd, 2009

Spiritual Travel (or How to Book your Cell at the Abbey)

For the last couple of weeks my life has been consumed by stuff. My siblings and I are dividing the contents of my mom’s house now that she’s moved to a retirement community. Every horizontal surface is covered with dishes, linens, knick knacks and the souvenirs of a life well lived and it’s filling me with an overwhelming urge to move to a Zen monastery where my only possession will be my wooden begging bowl. If you, too, are feeling overwhelmed by the minutiae of life, perhaps it’s time to consider a vacation aimed at renewal, reflection or reconnection. (more…)

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March 2nd, 2009

Terrell’s Front Table Books

March, in my mind at least, always marks the arrival of spring with the first hint of warming temperatures and tiny sprouts of green. At Wide World Books & Maps the spring publishing season has already filled the Front Table with a bouquet of new titles. Looking at the new arrivals, I was struck by how many of them had a search for identity as a central theme. (more…)

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