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Dozen Dirty Dumplings: Travelling across Asia in the 1980s [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 216 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bradt Travel Guides
  • ISBN-10: 1804694207
  • ISBN-13: 9781804694206
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 12,36 €*
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  • Tavahind: 16,49 €
  • Säästad 25%
  • See raamat ei ole veel ilmunud. Raamatu kohalejõudmiseks kulub orienteeruvalt 3-4 nädalat peale raamatu väljaandmist.
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  • Tasuta tarne
  • Tellimisaeg 2-4 nädalat
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 216 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bradt Travel Guides
  • ISBN-10: 1804694207
  • ISBN-13: 9781804694206
Teised raamatud teemal:
In the early 1980s - long before smartphones, budget flights or the safety net of Google Maps - an uncertain and gloriously uninformed Chris Price set out to cross Asia the slow way. Armed with a backpack, questionable judgement and a stack of diaries, the accidental adventurer crossed 13 countries by whatever moved: rattling trains, rust-bitten ferries, overcrowded buses, the odd smuggler's car - and frequented more dubious guesthouses and toilets than he will ever publicly admit to. For most of the journey he relied on a single Bartholomew's map, picked up guidebooks after travelling through the regions as souvenirs, and navigated China with a map written entirely in Chinese.

A Dozen Dirty Dumplings is a candid, amusing and often uncomfortable account of travel before the world became curated, convenient and constantly connected. In place of Instagram sunsets are nights in musty rooms, run-ins with border officials, strangers who offered improbable kindness, and long stretches of heat, dust and bafflement. Yet beneath the chaos runs a deeper thread: the discovery of small human moments - shared food, brief friendships, quiet landscapes - that stay long after the journey ended.

Drawn directly from the diaries Price kept on the road, A Dozen Dirty Dumplings maintains the immediacy, honesty and rawness of its original notes. It captures the confusion of youth, the thrill of independence, the fear of getting truly lost, danger and the exhilaration of travel across a continent that had not yet learned to perform for tourists. Join Price as he swims in the Ganges, hitchhikes with the People's Liberation Army, breakfasts with Tibetan nomads, and lunches with tribal elders carrying Mausers and AKs - moments that blend danger, absurdity and unexpected kindness.

Part travelogue, part coming-of-age story, A Dozen Dirty Dumplings offers a vivid portrait of a vanished era: a world of paper tickets, sweaty backpacks and conversations shouted through train windows. It is a story about learning - sometimes the hard way - how to navigate the world and oneself. Chaotic, reflective and sharply funny, it reveals that the most memorable journeys often come from the moments you never planned for - and could never repeat today.

Muu info

Will enchant anyone who travelled before smartphones and mass tourism, fans of classic travel writers, and Millennials or Gen-Z readers interested in retro, pre-digital, analogue travel Offers first-hand portrait of Asia in the early 1980s - a continent that had not yet learned to perform for tourists An authentic travel narrative: drawn directly from the author's diaries to offer a vivid portrait of a vanished era A coming-of-age journey told with humour and hindsight
Prologue. .back on the road again
1. India
2. Sri Lanka
3. India (again)
4. Pakistan (Peshawar)
5. Pakistan (Hunza)
6. India (yet again)
7. Nepal
8. India (for the last time, you will be glad to hear)
9. Bangladesh
10. Burma
11. Thailand to Singapore
12. Australia
13. Indonesia
14. China (Hong Kong to Taer'si)
15. China (Taer'si and back to Hong Kong)
Epilogue. Japan (and a plant pot)
Chris Price is a Japan-based Brit who, aged 67, is mildly surprised to still be here. In the early 1980s, he spent 18 unpredictable months travelling through Africa - an education in improvisation, heat, gorillas and guerrillas, and situations best not explained to close relatives - which he wrote up in a darkly funny memoir, We Don't Shoot Khawajas. He subsequently crossed Asia with a backpack and handwritten diaries, which became the basis for A Dozen Dirty Dumplings. Both books draw on encounters with tribal elders, armed men, border officials, and strangers whose kindness often outweighed their judgement, and smiling kids everywhere. In later life, Chris endured a long stint in banking 'to pay the school fees', before escaping to own and run a small hotel in rural Japan - think Fawlty Towers of the Orient. He now describes himself as a travel bum and writer, his eyes on Latin America's Gringo Trail.