Adventure Travel Lecture Series Events Archives

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Thursday, Oct. 23rd, 2003
Gaining Ground:
A History of Landmaking in Boston

Nancy S. Seasholes

Fully one-sixth of Boston is built on made land. Although other waterfront cities also have substantial areas that are built on fill, Boston probably has more than any city in North America. In Gaining Ground historian Nancy Seasholes has given us the first complete account of when, why, and how this land was created.

The story of landmaking in Boston is presented geographically; each chapter traces landmaking in a different part of the city from its first permanent settlement to the present. Seasholes introduces findings from recent archaeological investigations in Boston, and relates landmaking to the major historical developments that shaped it. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, landmaking in Boston was spurred by the rapid growth that resulted from the burgeoning China trade. The influx of Irish immigrants in the mid-nineteenth century prompted several large projects to create residential land--not for the Irish, but to keep the taxpaying Yankees from fleeing to the suburbs. Many landmaking projects were undertaken to cover tidal flats that had been polluted by raw sewage discharged directly onto them, removing the "pestilential exhalations" thought to cause illness. Land was also added for port developments, public parks, and transportation facilities, including the largest landmaking project of all, the airport.


A separate chapter discusses the technology of landmaking in Boston, explaining the basic method used to make land and the changes in its various components over time. The book is copiously illustrated with maps that show the original shoreline in relation to today’s streets, details from historical maps that trace the progress of landmaking, and historical drawings and photographs.

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Gaining Ground
     

Sept. 23rd, 2003
No Horizon is So Far: Two Women and Their Extraordinary Journey Across Antarctica

No Horizon is So Far

Ann and Liv Cross Antarctica

Written especially for younger readers, this book recounts the story of how the first women crossed the Antarctic continent on foot.

 


Ann Bancroft & Liv Arnesen

In February 2001, former schoolteachers Ann Bancroft and Liv Arnesen became the first women to cross the Antarctic continent on foot. Against all odds, they walked, skied, or ice-sailed for nearly three months in temperatures as cold as -35°F, towing their 250-pound supply sledges across 1700 miles of terrain riddled with rotten ice and deadly, hidden crevasses. Though modern technology could not ensure rescue should they need it, website transmissions and satellite phone calls enabled more than 3 million children from 65 countries to bear witness to the journey. In accomplishing the seemingly impossible, Ann and Liv inspired classrooms and re-ignited the aspirations of more than twenty-thousand adults who wrote to thank and encourage them.

Chronicling the dramatic details of this historic expedition, No Horizon Is So Far explores what drove Ann and Liv across the ice and ultimately into hearts and history books around the world. About journeys both literal and figurative, each marked with suspense, danger, and incredible endurance No Horizon Is So Far celebrates two modern-day heroines and that which is heroic in all of us.

For those young fans and for the millions of children yet to be touched by this amazing story, Ann and Liv Cross Antarctica chronicles the historic journey in words and beautiful oil illustrations.

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Ann Bancroft & Liv Arnesen

Ann Bancroft & Liv Arnesen

Ann Bancroft & Liv Arnesen

 

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May 6th, 2003
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: Seasons of Life and Land

Subhankar Banerjee
A Slide Lecture

Award-winning photographer Subhankar Banerjee fell in love with the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, devoting two years of his life to documenting the land, its wild species, and its native peoples. With Inupiat guide Robert Thompson, Banerjee traveled 4000 miles on foot, raft, kayak, and snowmobile over four seasons to prove that the Refuge is alive year around—and that leaving it intact in all its mysterious beauty is vital to the survival of this unique ecosystem.

In Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: Seasons of Life and Land, Banerjee tells a story in 120 breath-taking color images. His photos are paired with essays by Peter Matthiessen, David Allen Sibley, and George Schaller, among others, with a foreword by former president Jimmy Carter.

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Seasons of Life and Land

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May 1st, 2003
Vanished Kingdoms: A Woman Explorer in Tibet, China & Mongolia 1921-1925

Mabel Cabot


Mabel Cabot, author of "Vanished Kingdoms: A Woman Explorer in Tibet, China & Mongolia 1921-1925", will give a slide presentation about her mother's nine-month expedition to China. Janet Elliott Wulsin and her anthropologist husband Frederick Wulsin led a National Geographic Society expedition to document the vanishing cultures and tribes of Tibet and Inner Mongolia, and collect and study the flora and fauna of the region. Their caravan travelled across the southern regions of the Gobi desert on camelback, up rocky gorges by mule train, and down the Yellow River on a yak-skin raft.

The Wulsin's photographs and lantern slides capture medieval walled cities, Mongol caravans, remote villages in Kansu, elaborate Buddhist rituals, and the interiors of three of the great Tibetan monasteries—Kumbum, Labrang and Choni. Cabot's research of Janet Wulsin's letters and diaries, in conjunction with the expedition photographs and documents, offers readers an extraordinary account of adventure and discovery.

 

Vanished Kingdoms
     
April 15, 2003
AMC Guide to Outdoor Leadership

Hiker Safety with Alex Kosseff

In AMC Guide to Outdoor Leadership, author Alex Kosseff fuses his own extensive leadership experience with that of acclaimed experts as he details the critical skills and concepts every outdoor leader needs to know. Building on the basic foundations of leadership, Kosseff explores such critical topics as effective decision making, group dynamics, risk management, awareness and attitude, human impact on the environment, and more. Anecdotes from experts in the field demonstrate real-life applications of the key concepts covered. In addition, Kosseff addresses hot topics such as current “industry” standards for safety and quality, the use of technology in the wild, and legal issues for outdoor leaders.

 

AMC Guide to Outdoor Leadership

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March 18, 2003
Let's Go Spain and Portugal 2003

On the Road with Let's Go Spain & Portugal

Let’s Go Spain & Portugal 2003 writers Sebastian Brown, Nate Gray, Joshua Ludmir, and Karen McCarthy will offer first-hand advice about budget travel in Iberia and talk about their adventures while touring last summer. Stephanie Levner will speak about her recent, fall semester in Madrid.

Native Chilean Sebastian Brown explored Spain’s western regions of Extremadura, Cantabria, Asturias, and Galicia. Nate Gray’s travel route included the Pyrenees, Navarra, and Andorra; an Associated Press photo captured his being thrown by a bull in Pamplona! Joshua Ludmir’s eastern coast travels included Valencia, Murcia, and the Balearic Islands. Spanish teacher Karen McCarthy headed south to the Andalucia and the Algarve.


SEBASTIAN BROWN is a native Chilean and an experienced outdoorsman. Currently in his sophomore year at Harvard.

NATE GRAY has previously traveled through several parts of Spain and has traveled in Tanzania, Colombia, the Cayman Islands, and Belize. He is a senior at Harvard.

JOSHUA LUDMIR is a sophomore at Harvard who has been to Spain a number of times.

STEFANIE LEVNER has recently returned from studying in Madrid. She has previously researched in Peru and Indonesia for Let's Go.

KAREN MCCARTHY receved a masters from the Harvard Graduate School of Education in 2002. She is currently a Spanish teacher. She has traveled extensively in Central America and East Africa.

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Let's Go Spain and Portugal

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February 27, 2003
Inventing the Charles River

Karl Haglund and Renata von Tscharner

Author Karl Haglund, a senior planner for the Metropolitan District Commission, will reprise the various epochs of invention that accompanied the transformation of the lower Charles River from a pastoral, tidal estuary to a great urban lake and surrounding parkland. From the Colonial era to the Big Dig, Haglund will show how a host of interests intersected and then resolved their conflicts to create one of the world's great urban parklands and associated metropolitan system. Renata von Tscharner, president of the Charles River Conservancy, an organization dedicated to renewing the Charles River Parklands, will join Haglund in the discussion. A slide show will accompany the lecture.

 

inventing the Charles

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January 31,2003
Measuring America

Andro Linklater

Andro Linklater

Linklater's fascinating, provocative and eye-opening story of why America has ended up with its unique system of weights and measures, is explained in this volume that also shows how it has shaped the culture and country.

measuring America

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January 21, 2003
Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling

Ross King

The extraordinary stoy behind Michelangelo's masterpiece in the Sistine Chapel from the author of the acclaimed "Brunelleschi's Dome." King paints a magnificent picture of day-to-day life on the Sistine scaffolding and outside in the upheaval of early 16th century Rome.King will illustrate this lecture with slides.

Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling

 

     

December 6, 2002
Sahara
A Natural History

The majesty and mystery of the world’s largest desert.

Marq de Villiers with Sheila Hirtle

In the parched and seemingly lifeless heart of the Sahara desert, earthworms find enough moisture to survive. Four major mountain ranges interrupt the flow of dunes and gravel plains, and at certain times waterfalls cascade from their peaks. Even the sand amazes: massive dunes can appear almost overnight, and be gone just as quickly. We think we know the Sahara, the largest and most austere desert on Earth—yet it is full of surprises, as Marq de Villiers reveals in his brilliant and evocative biography of the land and its people.

Woven through de Villiers’s story is a chronicle of the desert’s nations and people: the Berbers and Arabs of the north; its black African south, whose ancestors peopled the greatest empires of Old Africa; and the extraordinary nomads—the Moors, the Tuareg (the famous “blue men”), and the Tubu—who call the desert home today. Illuminated by the eloquent written testimonies of past travelers, Sahara is a glittering geographic tour conveying the majesty, mystery, and abundance of life in what the outside world thinks of as the Great Emptiness.

 

Sahara

 

 

 

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Tuesday, November 19th
Birds

Robert Bateman

Celebrated painter Robert Bateman will speak about his new book, "Birds", and his journeys to distant destinations to create his compositions. He will also be showing slides of his paintings.

Bateman's travels for this book included Canada, Florida, the Gulf of Mexico, the Galapagos Islands, the Caribbean, Alaska, South Asia, Europe, Africa, and Antarctica. The landscapes of these areas are included in the paintings to show the bird's natural habitat.

Bateman is the author of "Birds of Heaven: Travels with Cranes"; his illustrations appear in numerous books about birds.

 

Birds

 

 

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Tuesday, November 12th
Adventures in Chile

Wayne Bernhardson

Wayne Bernhardson, author of Lonely Planet's Chile & Easter Island and the forthcoming Moon Handbooks: Chile, will show slides and answer questions about travel in Chile on Tuesday, November 12. While covering the entire country, he will focus on Chilean Patagonia, including the Carretera Austral (Southern Highway) and the region of Magallanes, particularly Torres del Paine national park and other wild areas. He will also stress activities like hiking, whitewater rafting and kayaking, and fishing in the mountains, rivers and lakes of an area that resembles the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia.

Chile's El Mercurio, the country's largest circulation newspaper, has called him "the gringo who knows Chile best." Currently residing in Oakland, he was born in North Dakota, grew up in Washington state (and is a UW graduate), and also lives part-time in Buenos Aires. He has also done research in Peru, Chile, Argentina and the Falkland Islands, where he spent a year as a Fulbright scholar.

 

Moon Handbook Chile

 

 

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Thursday, November 7th
Bicycling Cuba

Wally and Barbara Smith

The introduction to Bicycling Cuba contains practical information for biking in Cuba, and observations on Cuban life as Wally and Barbara Smith experienced it through six months of cycling.

The routes are organized into four major sections. One contains detailed directions for leaving Havana by bike, either west to Pinar del Rio Province or east to the Playas del Este and Playa Jibacoa. Subsequent sections cover routes in Pinar del Rio, Central Cuba, and the Oriente provinces of Holguin, Granma, Santiago de Cuba, and Guantanamo.

Bicycling Cuba

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Tuesday, October 29th
Lost in the Arctic

Lawrence Millman

Lawrence Millman writes stylish, often wildly amusing tales of remote places and offbeat characters, specializing in unsolved mysteries and odd myths. He is not immune to misadventures of his own, often landing in extremely uncomfortable or dangerous situations in his pursuit of new—and sometimes very, very old—places, cultures, and experiences. From the experience of being marooned on an uncharted island in the Arctic to an encounter with Kodiak bears in Alaska, this collection features 17 new pieces—punctuated by a scattering of Millman’s best work from more than two decades.
Visit Lawrence Millman's Reading List for the Far North


"Millman’s a genius."—Annie Dillard


"He is that rare traveler—a person with guts and a sense of humor. He is also a wonderful writer."—Paul Theroux

 

Lost in the Arctic

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Thursday, October 24
City Secrets: New YorkCity

Robert Kahn

Architect Robert Kahn, editor of the "City Secrets" series, will give a slide lecture about extraordinary places in his home town, New York City. Just released, "City Secrets New York City" includes entries by artists, writers, architects, curators, designers, and historians.

Robert Kahn heads his own architectural firm, teaches design (most recently at Yale University), and travels extensively to European cities for work and pleasure. He was a recipient of the American Academy in Rome’s Rome Prize.

Other series titles include "City Secrets Rome", "City Secrets Florence, Venice and the Towns of Italy", and "City Secrets London".

 

City Secrets NYC
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Thursday, October 17
Escape from Lucania

Brad and Barbara

 

David Roberts and Bradford Washburn

David Roberts, author of "Escape From Lucania", and Bradford Washburn will speak about Washburn's 1937 ascent of Mount Lucania.

In 1937, 17,150-ft Mt. Lucania was the highest unclimbed peak in North America. Nearly inaccessible, deep within the Wrangell-St. Elias range, it had been pronounced "impregnable" by the leader of an unsuccessful 1935 expedition.

Bradford Washburn and Bob Bates - Harvard classmates and talented, innovative mountaineers - set out to climb Lucania by flying to the base of the mountain. Their pilot was barely able to take off, alone, from the unexpectedly slushy Walsh Glacier. Conditions made it impossible for him to return. Bates and Washburn were left stranded in the midst of the Yukon's most rugged wilderness, with only half their team and part of their supplies. Their determination to climb Lucania and head for Kluane Lake, more than 100 miles to the east across virtually unknown territory, nearly cost them their lives.

David Roberts is a contributing editor to Outside magazine and is the author of several books, including "Points Unknown", "True Summit: Ascent of Annapurna", "Once They Moved Like the Wind" and "In Search of the Old Ones".

Traveling the world for eight decades, mountaineer, explorer, cartographer, and aerial photographer Bradford Washburn has documented the landscape from the Grand Canyon to the Alps, from Mount McKinley to Mount Everest. His many accomplishments include his directorship of Boston's Museum of Science.

 

At this event we will also celebrate the release of Bardford Washburn's new book, "On High." Filled with exciting and entertaining anecdotes and Washburn’s breathtaking photography and maps, "On High" is the first book to reveal, in his own words, the extraordinary life and work of Brad Washburn.

 

Escape From Lucania

 

On High

 

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Tuesday, October 8th
Northeastern Wilds

Stephen Gorman

Stephen Gorman, photographer and author of "Northeastern Wilds: Journeys of Discovery in the Northern Forest" will give a slide lecture about the treasured wild forests, mountain peaks, and rivers of Northern New England. Gorman's awe-inspiring photographs accompany descriptions of the region's history, geography, and challenged environment.

Gorman is the author of "American Wilderness" and a frequent contributor to National Geographic Publications, Outside Magazine, and Backpacker magazine.

 

Northeastrn Wilds
     

Tuesday, September 24
The Practical Nomad

Edward Hasbrouck

Edward Hasbrouck, author of "The Practical Nomad: How to Travel Around the World", will talk about planning and extended international trips. Hasbrouck will offer tips on selecting your route and companion, on air and ground travel strategies, and ways to improve your chances of spending time with people living in a country.

Hasbrouck is also the author of "The Practical Nomad Guide to the Online Marketplace". His advocacy of world travel and global awareness has marked his work as a travel agent, travel writer, seminar leader, and internet source for affordable travel.

 

Practical Nomad

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September 18th
Co-author of
Detectives on Everest

Jochen Hemmleb
Jochen Hemmleb

Jochen Hemmleb, co-author of "Detectives on Everest: The 2001 Mallory and Irvine Research Expedition" will give a slide presentation on the expedition, and its findings on the fate of Andrew Irvine. Hemmleb served as historian on the 1999 Irvine Expedition, which discovered George Mallory's body.

A mountaineer for twenty years, Hemmleb has climbed many of the classic peaks in the European Alps, and has also climbed and trekked in East Africa, New Zealand, South America, and the Himalaya. On the 1999 Mallory & Irvine Research Expedition, he reached Mount Everest’s North Col at 23,230 feet. Hemmleb’s archives on the mountaineering history of the Tibetan side of Mount Everest and the mystery of Mallory and Irvine is one of the most comprehensive private collections. He lives in southwest Germany.

 

Detectives on Everest
     
July 18th, 2002
On the Water: Discovering America in a Rowboat
Nathaniel Stone

Few people have ever considered the eastern United States to be an island, but when Nat Stone began tracing waterways in his new atlas at the age of ten he discovered that if one had a boat it was possible to use a combination of waterways to travel up the Hudson River, west across the barge canals and the Great Lakes, down the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico, and back up the eastern seaboard. Years later, still fascinated by the idea of the island, Stone read a biography of Howard Blackburn, a nineteenth-century Gloucester fisherman who had attempted to sail the same route a century before. Stone decided he would row rather than sail, and in April 1999 he launched a scull beneath the Brooklyn Bridge to see how far he could get. After ten months and some six thousand miles he arrived back at the Brooklyn Bridge, and continued rowing on to Eastport, Maine.

Nathaniel Stone grew up in Marblehead, Massachusetts. He taught tenth grade history in Pasadena, California, and Zuni, New Mexico, where he founded the local newspaper and currently resides.

 

On the Water

 

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May 23, 2002
A Bicycle Pilgrimage: Andalusia to the Hebrides

John Hanson Mitchell

John Hanson Mitchell tells of his 1500-mile ride on a trusty old Peugeot bicycle in the early 1970's from the port of Cadiz to just below the Arctic Circle. He follows the European spring up through southern Spain, the wine and oyster country near Bordeaux, to Versailles, Wordsworth's Lake District, precipitous Scottish highlands, and finally to a Druid temple on the island of Lewis in the Hebrides. In true John Mitchell fashion this journey is interspersed with myth, natural history, and ritual, all revolving around the lure and lore of the sun, culturally and historically.

John Hanson Mitchell is the author of The Wildest Place on Earth, Ceremonial Time, and Tresspassing, and the editor of Sanctuary, the journal of the Massachusetts Audubon Society. Winner of the 1994 John Burroughs Essay Award, he received the 2000 New England Booksellers' Award for his body of work. He lives in Littleton, Massachusetts.

 

Following the Sun

 

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May 7th, 2002
Lusitania: An Epic Tragedy

Diana Preston

On May 7, 1915, a routine passage across the Atlantic from New York to Liverpool turned tragic when a German torpedo hit the British luxury liner, RMS Lusitania. The ship sank just eleven miles off the Irish coast, killing more than 1,200 people-mostly civilians and more than 100 Americans. Weaving the stories of those who were on the liner and the submarine that fired the torpedo into her own narrative, Preston brings to life the consequences of the sinking.

Describing how the drama played out against the background of the First World War, Preston's new book, Lusitania,gives pocket histories of the first days of the modern submarine and the rise of the luxury liner. Taking readers on a tour of the Lusitania, she recreates life on board of the fabulous liner and introduces the celebrities-including American millionaire Alfred Vanderbilt, theater producer Charles Frohman, and Boston bookseller Charles Lauriat-and other passengers who were there when the ship went down, juxtaposing their stories with those of the captain and crew of the U-20 that sunk the Lusitania.

Diana Preston is an Oxford-educated historian and author of The Boxer Rebellion, and A First Rate Tragedy: Captian Scott and the Race for the South Pole. Diana and her husband Michael Preston are currently working on a biography of the 17th-century British explorer, naturalist, scientist, pirate and bucaneer William Dampier. When not writing, Preston is an avid traveler with her husband. Together, they have traveled throughout India, Asia, Africa, and Antarctica, and have climber Mount Kinabalu, Mount Kilimanjaro, and Mont Roraima. Their adventures have also included gorilla-tracking in Zaire and camping their way across the Namibian desert.

 

Lusitania

 

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June 7th, 2001
The Sibley Guide to Birds

David Allen Sibley
Birding with Sibley

David Allen Sibley, author and illustrator of last fall's extraordinary new nature guide, The Sibley Guide to Birds, presents a slide lecture on bird watching and indentification.

"Once in a great while, a natural history book changes the people look at the world...in 1838, John James Audubon's Birds of America was one...in 1934, Roger Tory Peterson produced Field Guide to the Birds...Now comes ."

-- The New York Times

Sibley Guide to Birds

 

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May 20th, 2001
French Lessons: Adventures with Knife, Fork, & Corkscrew

Peter Mayle

Presented by Globe Corner Bookstore & The FrenchLibrary and Cultural Center -- Back Bay


Peter Mayle discusses and reads from his new book, French Lessons, a gastronomic journey celebrating France's restaurants, markets, festivals, and vineyards. Venturing from his adopted Provence to the far corners of the French countryside, the author invites readers to join him in experiencing well-established and out-of-the-way culinary delights.

French Lessons

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May 15th, 2001 Arctic Crossing: Journey through the Northwest Passage

Jonathan Waterman

Kayaker/photographer Jonathan Waterman's new book, Arctic Crossing, chronicles his 2,200-mile journey across the Arctic. He will read from his book, talk about his voyage, and a show a video.
Waterman is the author of In the Shadow of Denali, Kayaking the Vermillion Sea, A Most Hostile Mountain, and other works. His documentary, Surviving Denali, won an Emmy in 1994 for Best Cinematography in a Series and won the award for Best Mountaineering Film at the International Film Festival. He lives on a thrity-foot sailboat moored in various Pacific ports.

 

Arctic Crossing

 

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May 10th, 2001
Paris to the Moon
Adam Gopnik

A French Library and Cultural Center Lecture
The New Yorker writer and author of last fall's bestseller, Paris to the Moon, will speak about the adventures of an American family living in Paris.
Please note that this lecture occurs in Back Bay. There is an admission fee of $20.00 for members, $30.00 for non-members (benefits the French Library) for this lecture. Call the French Library at (617) 912-0400 to make reservations. Also please note that Mr. Gopnik may deliver his presentation in French.

Paris to the Moon

 

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May 3rd, 2001
Where the Pavement Ends: One Women's Bicycle Trip through Mongolia, China & Vietnam
Erica Warmbrunn

Bicycling through Mongolia, China & Vietnam
Erika Warmbrunn is the author of newly released Where the Pavement Ends: One Women's Bicycle Trip through Mongolia, China & Vietnam, winner of the prestigious Barbara Savage Memorial Award. The author's reading and discussion of her book will include a slide presentation about her eight-month, 5,000-mile cycling trip.

Where the Pavement Ends

 

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March 20th, 2001
Ex-Libris:Tales of 15th Century Florence & 17th Century London
Ross King
GCB History Lecture

The author of last fall's bestseller, Brunelleschi's Dome, and newly released novel, Ex-Libris discusses the construction of the dome of Santa Maria del Fiore and a London Bridge bookseller's discovery of intrigue in rare book collecting in 17th Century Europe.

Ex-Libris

 

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March 11th, 2001
Invented Maps, Imaginary Landscapes Exhibit

Mark Schafer
GCB Art Exhibit

The opening reception for an exhibit of artist Mark Shafer's map collages, on view through April 8th, 2001. The reception is from 5 to 7 pm at the Harvard Square store.

 

 
     
March 7th, 2001
Pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela
David Gitlitz and Linda Davidson

The authors of the recently published The Pilgrimage Road to Santiago: the Complete Cultural Handbook present an illustrated lecture on the road's villages, churches, religious art, historical sites, terrain and flora.

Pilgrimage Road to Santiago

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February 21st, 2001
On the Road with Let's Go Turkey
Let's Go Staff

Let's Go Turkey 2001 editor Beth Daniels, writers Alexander Schrank and Selin Tuysuzoglue, and Let's Go Editor in Chief Ankur Ghosh will discuss travel in Turkey and provide a glimpse "behind the curtain" of how this popular guidebook is updated annually.

Let's Go Turkey

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February 6th, 2001
Paddling the Usumacinta River Basin
Christopher Shaw

Chistopher Shaw, author of Sacred Monkey River: A Canoe Trip with the Gods, will speak about the challenges faced and enchantment encountered while running the Usumacinta River Basin and other rivers in this legendary and politically contested region spanning the Mexican/Guatemalan border.

Sacred Monkey River

 

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View our Current Events

Past Speakers Include:

Peter Alden

Liv Arnesen

Ann Brancroft

Subhankar Banerjee

Robert Bateman

Wayne Bernhardson

Hilary Bradt

David
Breashears

Tom Brosnahan

William F.
Buckley

Mabel Cabot

Dierdre Chetham

Bruce Chatwin

Ann Mariah
Cook

Marq DeVilliers

Bill Dalton

Gretel Ehrlich

Richard Estes

Arthur Frommer

Edward Gargan

Ken Good

Adam Gopnik

Stephen Gorman

Jeff Greenwald

Karl Haglund

Edward Hasbrouck

Sterling Hayden

Jochen Hemmleb

John Hersey

Sheila Hirtle

Robert Kahn

Joe Kane

Ross King

David Lamb

Charles Leocha

Andro Linklater

Barry Lopez

Karl Luntta

Rosemary
Mahoney

Peter Mayle

Lawrence Millman

John Hanson Mitchell

Jan Morris

Mary Morris

Karin Muller

Eric Newby

Rory Nugent

Redmond
O’Hanlon

Stephen O’Shea

Roger Tory
Peterson

Diana Preston

Rob Rachowiecki

David Roberts

Nancy S. Seasholes

Christopher Shaw

David Allen
Sibley

Wally and Barbara Smith

Dava Sobel

Stuart Stevens

Chris Stewart

Nathaniel Stone

Jeffrey Tayler

Paul Theroux

Renata von Tscharner

Erica Warmbrunn

Bradford
Washburn

Jonathan Waterman

Tony & Maureen
Wheeler

Douglas Whynott