Advertisement

15 beautiful books to buy travel lovers this Christmas

travel books christmas gift ideas - Getty
travel books christmas gift ideas - Getty

When you travel across pages, not even a new variant of Covid can hinder your movement. In the past year, I’ve wandered over the Pennines and deep into Wales. I’ve climbed to mist-shrouded Scottish summits, dived in Caribbean seas. I’ve splashed along the muddy roads of Madagascar, followed a river between Russia and China, and circled the Black Sea. Here are the books that took me away…

The Long Field

by Pamela Petro

(Little Toller, £20)

Why, a reviewer once asked, is the American Pamela Petro so obsessed with Wales? Petro’s answer is both a memoir and an exploration of hiraeth – a Welsh word for longing for all you can’t have. In it, she weaves together the essential hiraeth stories of Wales with aspects of her own life: as a gay woman, as the survivor of a train crash, as the daughter of a parent with dementia. It’s an absorbing meditation on the meaning of home.

The Long Field: Pamela Petro
The Long Field: Pamela Petro

The Amur River

by Colin Thubron

(Chatto & Windus, £20)

At 79, having been writing about Russia and China for 40 years, Colin Thubron sets off along the 3,000-mile river where they supposedly interconnect. Before he’s 15 pages in, he’s had two falls (X-rays months later show two fractured ribs and a broken ankle). On the ground, even cops treat him more gently than he expects, and his guides wonder whether he’s still up to it; on the page, readers need have no such doubts. The writer mightn’t be as sprightly as he was, but the writing is as lyrical as ever.

The Amur River: Colin Thubron
The Amur River: Colin Thubron

The Travel Writing Tribe: Journeys in Search of a Genre

by Tim Hannigan

(C Hurst, £20)

Travel writers, as well as travel readers, will find pleasure and profit in this. Hannigan journeys both deep into the archives and on to the home ground of some of the most illustrious members of the note-taking tribe. What drives these people, he asks, and how accurately and honestly do they show us the world? It’s a deft piece of genre-hopping, combining interviews – with writers including Dervla Murphy and Kapka Kassabova, Colin Thubron and Samanth Subramanian – with memoir, criticism… and travel writing.

The Travel Writing Tribe: Tim Hannigan
The Travel Writing Tribe: Tim Hannigan

Troubled Water: A Journey Around the Black Sea

by Jens Mühling

(Haus, £16.99)

One of Mühling’s ancestors, an admiral, fought for Catherine the Great, who in 1783 ordered Russia’s first annexation of Crimea. Mühling himself reported on the second, ordered by Vladimir Putin, in 2014. Here he explores nations ancient and nascent, meets everyone from marine scientists to cigarette smugglers, and digs into a history of neighbourly conflict. It’s a brisk and brilliant tour, a reminder that ethnically mixed communities shaped these shores for thousands of years, until they were torn apart by imperialists and nationalists.

Troubled Water: Jens Mühling
Troubled Water: Jens Mühling

The Gardens of Mars

by John Gimlette

(Apollo, £10.99)

Madagascar as documented by Gimlette is weirder and more wonderful than the version animated by DreamWorks. It’s off Africa, but its burnt-red west was first settled by Asians, only 10,000 years ago. It’s a place where, today, you can access 4G technology and eat a chameleon that was killed with a spear. Gimlette’s “walk-through history” is a tour de force, taking in slavery, Welsh missionaries, ancestor worship, French conquest, and forts whose ramparts are rendered in millions of egg whites.

The Gardens of Mars: John Gimlette
The Gardens of Mars: John Gimlette

Islands of Abandonment: Life in the Post-Human Landscape

by Cal Flyn

(William Collins, £16.99)

Grey partridges wandered car parks near Cambridge; a cuckoo was seen in Osterley, west London, for the first time in 20 years: wildlife took advantage when humans were locked down. Flyn chronicles that phenomenon on a larger scale. Her compelling book, shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize and in Scotland’s National Book Awards, is about 12 abandoned places around the world – ghost towns and exclusion zones, no man’s lands and post-industrial hinterlands – “and what happens when nature is allowed to reclaim its place”.

Islands of Abandonment: Cal Flyn
Islands of Abandonment: Cal Flyn

I Belong Here: A Journey Along the Backbone of Britain

by Anita Sethi

(Bloomsbury, £16.99)

Anita Sethi, born and bred in Manchester, was taking a train from Liverpool to Newcastle when she became the victim of a race-hate crime. Afterwards, despite panic attacks, she determined that she would continue travelling on her own and assert her right to exist. In I Belong Here she explores the Pennines, “the backbone” of England. It’s a journey in the head as well as on the ground, one that grows in power as she pushes on, demonstrating that she has backbone aplenty of her own.

I Belong Here: Anita Sethi
I Belong Here: Anita Sethi

Osebol: Voices from a ­Swedish Village

by Marit Kapla

(Allen Lane, £20)

It’s not billed as “travel”, but it’s definitely transporting: 800 pages, laid out like a prose poem, on a village many Swedes would recently have struggled to find on a map. It is particular in its focus on one place – in the forests of northern Varmland, where logging’s been automated, school rolls and elk are declining, and wolves increasing – and universal in its reminders that nothing stays the same. Kapla, who grew up in Osebol, interviewed most of its 40 remaining adults, ranging in age from 18 to 92 and in occupation from carpenter to carer. You feel as though you’re in among them.

Osebol: Marit Kapla
Osebol: Marit Kapla

Two Worlds: Above and Below the Sea

by David Doubilet

(Phaidon, £39.95)

David Doubilet (born in 1946) reckons he has spent more than 27,000 hours photographing in water since he first put his Brownie Hawkeye camera in an anaesthetist’s rubber bag at the age of 12. It wasn’t until 1990, though, that he felt he’d achieved his first successful merging of two worlds, air and water, with a picture of a stingray gliding through sand, sea and – ­apparently – clouds. Here, he gathers his most telling “half-and-half” pictures of two inextricably linked worlds, “to bear witness to the wonder, the beauty, the loss and, I hope, the resilience of our oceans”.

Two Worlds: David Doubilet
Two Worlds: David Doubilet

Night on Earth

by Art Wolfe

(Earth Aware, £35)

Wolfe’s book opens with Ruskin Hartley, executive director of the ­International Dark-Sky Association, reminding us of the damage we’re doing with light pollution. It closes with images of blazing skyscrapers in Tokyo and Manhattan, of streaming headlights and tail lights on the Champs-Elysées. In between, everywhere from Brazilian wetland to Indian market, it’s an invitation to move through a lower-wattage world, and enjoy the simple pleasure of watching it get dark.

Night on Earth
Night on Earth

Portrait of Humanity: Volume 3

(Hoxton Mini Press, £22.95)

Portrait of Humanity is an international award designed to show that “there is more that unites us than sets us apart”. This year’s collection brings us a sweaty-faced anaesthetist from intensive care in London, friends hovering either side of a door in Switzerland, and a woman worried by the latest news in Japan. But among the 200 images are many in which people are touching each other, communicating in a way that, as Otegha Uwagba puts it in her introduction, “transcends language barriers and… binds us together in its universal capacity to provide comfort”.

Portrait of Humanity: Volume 3
Portrait of Humanity: Volume 3

Landscape Photographer of the Year: Collection 14

(Ilex Press, £30)

Fog and mist feature often this year in an ever-dependable showcase for the best images of Britain. So, too, do references in the photographers’ notes to first trips and walks after lockdown and to looking closer to home. The Nuba Survival, a sculpture in a field in Checkendon, south Oxfordshire, by the local artist John Buckley, shows two skeletons locked in an embrace. It’s a memorial of the civil war in Sudan, but to the photographer Alison Fairley it spoke of Covid-19 and of “those who are broken and those who are desperately seeking hugs”.

Landscape Photographer of the Year: Collection 14
Landscape Photographer of the Year: Collection 14

India

by Harry Gruyaert

(Thames & Hudson, £45)

“I don’t know anything about India – it’s too vast and too complex,” Gruyaert says modestly. But he responds to it magnificently with a camera. Gruyaert (born in Antwerp in 1941 and a member of the Magnum agency since 1981) has been visiting India since the 1970s, but this is his first book of the images he has made there. Whether on roadside or riverside, of crowds or individuals, they’re sensuous in colour, striking in contrast; his way, he says, of “bearing witness to a mystery”.

India
India

Wildlife Photographer of the Year: Portfolio 31

(Natural History Museum, London, £25)

This year’s ­competition saw a record number of entries, 50,490, from 30 countries. The “big pictures” are here – among them one of a young white-tailed kite reaching towards its hovering father to grab a live mouse – but the naturalist Chris Packham, in his introduction, senses the impact of lockdowns: “A skating fly, craneflies entangled in ecstasy, a cuddled bat, newts in coitus – little treasures from the more private lives of humans and the tiny things they found when their lives shrank and their world wasn’t so wide any more.”

Wildlife Photographer of the Year: Portfolio 31
Wildlife Photographer of the Year: Portfolio 31

Mother: A Tribute to Mother Earth

by Marsel van Oosten

(teNeues, £50)

Mother is both a celebration of our natural world and an impassioned argument for its protection. Van Oosten, a Dutchman who has won the grand titles Wildlife Photographer of the Year, International Nature ­Photographer of the Year and Travel ­Photographer of the Year, collects his favourite images from the past 15 years, many being what he calls “animal­scapes”, where he accepts whatever wildlife wanders into the frame. “This is our only planet,” he says, “and we are slowly killing it. It’s not too late yet – we can be the positive change – together.”

Mother: Marsel van Oosten
Mother: Marsel van Oosten

Which books would make your list for travel lovers this Christmas? Tell us in the comments section below