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De 20 beste reisboeken van de 20e eeuw
Het Engelse dagblad de Times heeft op
internet een lijst gepubliceerd van de ’20 beste reisboeken van de
afgelopen eeuw’.
De meeste boeken uit deze lijst zijn nog leverbaar, maar bij sommige
boeken geldt een levertijd tussen de 7 en 14 werkdagen.
Reizenoppapier.nl heeft bij elke beschrijving een afbeelding van het
boek geplaatst. Als u op het plaatje van het boek klikt komt u in de
webwinkel van Reizenoppapier.nl en vindt u meer informatie over het
boek. Bij de afbeelding is ook aangegeven of er een Nederlandse
vertaling van het boek is.
Reizenoppapier.nl heeft combinatie pakketten van de Engelstalige boeken
samengesteld, met een speciale prijs!
Misschien een leuk Sinterklaas of Kerstcadeau idee?
Ook de Nederlandstalige boeken zijn als pakket te bestellen, maar hier
kunnen wij u helaas géén korting geven vanwege de geldende vaste
boekenprijs in Nederland.
Als u een andere pakketsamenstelling wilt kunt u altijd contact opnemen
met Reizenoppapier.nl. Na de Top 20 lijst vindt u de pakketaanbiedingen
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klik dan hier:
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weer terug naar deze pagina, ga dan naar de homepage en
klik vervolgens op ‘Specials’.
From Times Online , September 17, 2009
The 20 best travel books
of the past century
These are the books that
have inspired generations to travel, and to write: the
best of their genre in the past 100 years
Steve Keenan
The books featured below are the recommendations of
several authors, including Rob Ryan, Victoria Hislop,
Colin Thubron, Alexander McCall Smith and Douglas
Kennedy. I also have recommendations from Angus Clarke,
Ginny Light and Kate Quill, colleagues at The Times and
timesonline.
The other choices are mine and purely subjective, aided
by straw polls of other writers, perceived wisdom,
Twitter and 40 years of reading travel literature. And
the real pleasure in putting the list together has been
in using the Times Archive to find original dispatches,
reviews and features about the books.
It's a list and and I am very conscious of no room for
Gavin Young, William Dalrymple or Kerouac. You may also
think some to be simply historical novels: but then
Orwell, Hemingway or Steinbeck would be in. To me, these
are pure travel books: ones that have inspired later
generations to follow, or to find their own way.
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20. FULL TILT: IRELAND
TO INDIA WITH A BICYCLE by Dervla Murphy (1965)
When aged 10, Murphy was given a bike and atlas and she
planned her trip. And, having finally ridden to India in
1963 on her bike, she then decided to stay and work with
Tibetan refugee children. She was, said The Times,
an inveterate traveller "looking at everything and
putting it down with naivety and charm." She had a
daughter, Rachel, and stopped travelling for five years
- but then set to again, with Rachel, covering India,
South America and Madagascar (having previously covered
Ethiopa by mule). She has written 24 travel books, the
last - from Cuba was travelling with Rachel and her
granddaughters in 2008. But it's her solo trip by bike,
aged, 31, after the death of her mother, that enthralls.
She fought off thieves and a would-be rapist in Iran,
fell in love with Afghanistan and recovered from broken
bones and heatstroke. Inspiring.
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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19. THE ART OF TRAVEL in de
Botton (2002)
For me this is the definitive travel book, as it addresses the fundamental question of why we travel at all. With his usual
mixture of wit and amazing intellectual insight, de Botton
examines why travel is sometimes disappointing and suggests how
we can make our experiences happier ones, and also identifies
what it is that makes some journeys so pleasurable. He calls on
other artists to provide insight into the subject too – Flaubert,
Wordsworth, Hopper, all have something to tell us. De Botton
reminds us that our own impressions, rather than the things that
guidebooks tell us to look out for, are what really matter. He
made me understand why I sometimes find a renaissance church
dull and why an airport cafe can seem the most exciting place in
the world. It is a masterpiece of travel writing -
Victoria Hislop
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
De kunst van het Reizen
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18. A DRAGON APPARENT - TRAVELS IN
INDO-CHINA by Norman Lewis (1951)
Caroline Moorhead wrote in The Times in 1983 that Lewis was "as
much at home in fiction as in travelling, with precise detail
and a gentle, self-mocking humour." His trip to Indo-China was
the book that was to kick-start his travel writing career - he
went on to write another 10 travel books even after 1983. The
Guardian obituary in 2002 recalls that he once stated that he
preferred to produce 'revealing little descriptions; I think of
myself as the semi-invisible man'. Graham Greene called him one
of the best writers of the century. He was also a passionate
campaigner. An article he wrote for The Sunday Times in 1968
about the massacre of Brazilian Indians is credited with
creating Survival International.
Klik op het boek voor meer info
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17. THE GRANITE ISLAND by Dorothy
Carrington (1971)
She was so captivated by Corsica on her first visit to the
island, in 1948, that she never left. She wrote the book in 1971
and died in 2002. There is a memorial in Ajaccio's Marin
cemetery, with a quotation from the book on its base - "...that
Corsica would be my lot." I don't think I have ever read a
better book devoted to one destination over such a period of
years. The traveller is a beneficiary of her accrued knowledge
of the island, her immersion in a life of bandits and hunters.
Unsurprisingly, her marriage didn't last but her love of Corsica
did: two other books and several articles followed this, the
definitive book on the island.
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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16. CUT STONES AND CROSSROADS - A
JOURNEY IN PERU by Ronald Wright (1984)
Good travel writing is many things, most of them involving
adjectives. The best travel writing teaches you to see – to see
the things which, as a newcomer in a foreign place, you might
not understand or even notice. Inca stonework is a good example.
Go to Cuzco in Peru and you see it, everywhere – walls,
buildings, doorways. Even the dimmest package tourist will
notice it – but you need help to start seeing it, really seeing.
That, for me, was the main revelation in Cut Stones and
Crossroads. Sure he does the history, the archaeology, the
food (such as it is), the dangers, the mysterious juxtapositions
of ancient traditions clashing with the modern world, and he
does it all with humour, honesty and a certain poetic clarity,
but what he does best is Inca stonework. He dwells on the
variety of textures, the astonishing sculptural skill, the
complete absence of straight lines. He explains how the bizarre
beauty of the stonework is intimately related to its resistance
to earthquakes. So, instead of complicated black rocks in the
rain 3,750m up the Andes you see a subtle, consciously
articulated aesthetic tradition. You see the stone equivalent of
Abu Simbel, Bach’s chorales, take your pick. Revelatory -
Angus Clarke
Helaas door ons niet meer leverbaar
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15. NOTES FROM A SMALL ISLAND by
Bill Bryson (1995)
Bill Bryson’s farewell tour of Britain, after 20 years living in
his adopted home, is an affectionate and amusing read. His tales
of meeting eccentric people and visiting the extremities of the
country are catalogued in typical Bryson style – observant,
witty and engaging. One of the most memorable sections is his
bewilderment at some of Britain’s bizarre place names - Titsey
and Shellow Bowells among them. There are rants too – his
derision for the destruction of historic buildings, town
planning and traffic lights is sincere, but not wearisome,
thanks to his droll prose. It is Britons who will enjoy this
book most – a reminder to feel affection, rather than irritation,
for the foibles and oddities of this small island - Ginny Light
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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14. THE SILK ROAD: BEYOND THE
CELESTIAL KINGDOM by Colin Thubron (1989)
“Modern travel writing has always been created with a certain
amount of gimmickry,” Thubron told The Times, “which
surprises me because I don’t really understand why you have to
do that. The world abroad seems sufficiently extraordinary and
peculiar without my having to resort to all that." Forty years
of travel writing has resulted in an epic library: a romantic,
who travelled alone, whether driving through Russia in a Morris
Minor or walking the Great Wall of China two years before his
Silk Road masterpiece. He was to return to the Silk Road for a
2006 book, walking the 7,000 miles
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In 2006 keerde Colin Thubron terug naar de zijderoute en schreef
hierover een nieuw boek. Deze boeken zijn wel verkrijgbaar zowel
in het Engels als Nederlands. |
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In het Engels |
In het Nederlands |
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Shadow of the Silkroad

Klik op het boek voor meer info |
Schaduw van de Zijderoute

Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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13. LOVE AND WAR IN THE APENNINES
by Eric Newby (1971)
"The Italian government had collapsed, and the Germans were in
disarray, when Newby walked out of his prison camp and into the
arms of the Italian resistance fighters in the nearby mountains
-- the mountains of Parmesan cheese, prosciutto, pasta and red
wine," reads the website of cycle tour company Experience Plus.
Newby returned to italy in 1956 with his wife Wanda - who he met
while on the run. And he finally wrote the book of his life
among the Italian resistance (read the full background to the
book on Wikipedia) after he became Travel Editor at The Observer.
Many pure travel books were to follow but it was this book which
fired his imagination - and that of other writers to come,
including Alexander McCall Smith.
Klik op het boek voor meer info
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12. BRAZILIAN ADVENTURE by Peter
Fleming (1934)
It began with a classified ad in the ‘Agony column’ of The
Times: "Exploring and sporting expedition, under experienced
guidance, leaving England June, to explore rivers Central Brazil,
if possible ascertain fate Colonel Fawcett; abundance game, big
and small; exceptional fishing; ROOM TWO MORE GUNS; highest
references expected and given. Write Box X.’Peter Fleming was
working on The Spectator. He had just met his future
bride Celia Johnson (Brief Encounter), yet the pull of
finding the lost Colonel Percy Fawcett was too much. He signed
up, with a commission from The Times to send dispatches
from the Matto Grosso. It ended with two rival teams racing back
down the Amazon to put their side of the story of fiasco and
incompetence first. He described it as "an venture for which
Rider Haggard might have written the plot and Conrad designed
the scenery". Evelyn Waugh, though, supplied the characters and
dialogue: "Sao Paulo is like Reading, only much farther away".
Taut, gripping and sardonic, the book made Peter as famous as
his brother Ian would later become. It is dated only in the
sheer number of animals Fleming manages to shoot - Rob
Ryan
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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11. IN PATAGONIA by Bruce Chatwin
(1977)
In Patagonia, published in 1978, is an “autobiografictional”
travelog, says The Literary Encyclopedia, which both records and
imagines the fulfilment of one of Chatwin's childhood
fascinations, namely to retrace the travel adventures of his
grandmother's uncle, Charley Milward, seadog, entrepreneur, and
globetrotting family legend, who had died in Punta Arenas, Chile.
In his review in The Times in 1977, Paul Theroux wrote that
Chatwin saw practically all of Patagonia, travelling by foot,
boat, bus and train, adding: "He has fulfilled the desire of all
real travellers, of having found a place that is far and strange
and seldom visited, like The Land Where The Jumblies Live."
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
In Patagonië
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10. INTO THE HEART OF BORNEO y
Redmond O'Hanlon and James Fenton (1984)
One of the most oft-repeated stories heard on my travels in the
80s was when somebody was taking a leak in a convenient stream.
"Remember that story about the creepie crawlie that climbed up
O'Hanlon's urine while peeing in a river," was the refrain. And
it was true, well - it came from this book. Not so much
Victorian explorers, more a precursor of Ray Mears, O'Hanlon and
Fenton's foray into Borneo for The Sunday Times,
accompanied by a bunch of SAS soldiers, was a riot of humour and
self-deprecation - the template for much of the travel writing
that was to follow. As a natural historian, O'Hanlon also
managed to add an Attenborough-esque edge to the book. But not
at the expense of the laughs
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
Naar het hart van Borneo
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9. TRIESTE AND THE MEANING OF
NOWHERE by Jan Morris (2001)
What I love about this is the way she tussles with the
intangible qualities of a place, those things you can never
quite put your finger on. So much travel writing is concerned
with the factual, the real - which often makes it dull to read,
because it doesn't ask any questions, it just records. This book
is different. It's a study of a faded, unexceptional city, but
one that gets under your skin. Morris first visited as a soldier
in WWII and she writes: "Trieste makes one ask sad questions of
oneself. What am I here for? Where am I going?" And a brilliant,
brilliant title, too - Kate Quill
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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8. ROAD TO OXIANA by Robert Byron
(1933)
A collage of ... little playlets, and what going on is another
book that gave me to realise what was possible to the whole
genre of travel writing" - Colin Thubron,
who also nominated Freya Stark ("Her books gave me a wonderful
sense of the beauty possible in travel writing") and Patrick
Leigh Fermor (Mani - Travels in the Southern Peloponnese,
1958).
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
De Weg naar Oxiana
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7. MANI - TRAVEL IN THE SOUTHERN
PELOPONNESE by Patrick Leigh Fermor (1958)
I believe the very greatest travel writer of the 20th century
was Fermor. This book is beautifully written, so vivid, but he
uses a Latinate prose. You learn this is a man who has had a
classical education - if he didn't, I don't know how he would do
it. It is an absolutely marvellous and wonderful book -
Alexander McCall Smith,
who also nominated From The Holy Mountain (William
Dalrymple) and Tours of the Trabazond (Rose Macaulay).
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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6. AS I WALKED OUT ONE MIDSUMMER
MORNING - Laurie Lee (1969)
Part memoir, part travel book. Unforgettable portrait of Spain
before and during the Civil War, full of colour, romance,
adventure and unforgettable imagery. I fell in love with Spain
as a teenager long before I visited the country, thanks to this
book - Kate Quill
Klik op het boek voor meer info
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5. ARABIA THROUGH THE LOOKING
GLASS by Jonathan Raban (1979)
Arabia had a profound effect on this writer when he stumbled
across it at the start of the l980s. Travelling through the Gulf
States, through the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and Yemen,
Raban produced a book that was so prescient in its understanding
of the vast seismic gulf that separates the West from the Arab
world, while also capturing the region at a moment when the
struggle between Islamic and Occidental values was beginning to
percolate. Arabia also announced the arrival of one of the great
prose stylists in travel literature - and it showed me that the
'travel book' could be constructed as a fiction that happened -
an one which has with all the narrative force and complexity of
great fiction - Douglas Kennedy,
author of Beyond the Pyramids, In God's Country and Chasing
Mammon.
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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4. THE GREAT RAILWAY BAZAAR by
Paul Theroux (1975)
“Ever since childhood, when I lived within earshot of the Boston
and Maine, I have seldom heard a train go by and not wished I
was on it,” begins Paul Theroux on his adventures in The
Great Railway Bazaar. His four-month passage across Asia’s
legendary train routes included the Direct-Orient Express (a
service launched in 1962 and withdrawn completely in 1977,
ending all direct service from Paris to Istanbul or Athens). He
also covered the Khyber Pass Local and the Trans-Siberian
Express and describes the many places, cultures and sounds he
encounters as well as the people he met along his journey.
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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Paul Theroux stapt, dertig jaar na de publicatie van The Great
railway Bazaar, opnieuw in de trein om deze ambitieuze reis te
maken. De trein brengt hem wederom van Londen naar Tokyo, maar
vanuit zijn coupé ziet hij dit keer dat de dertig jaar duidelijk
sporen hebben achtergelaten in het landschap. Naar aanleiding
van deze nieuwe reis schrijft hij weer een boek: |
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In het Engels |
In het Nederlands |
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Ghost Train to the Eastern Star

Klik op het boek voor meer info |
De grote Spoorwegcarrousel retour

Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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3. ANTARCTICA - THE WORST JOURNEY
IN THE WORLD by Apsley Cherry-Garrard (1922)
Travel writing at its most extreme. Apsley Cherry-Garrard was
one of the paying members of Scott's second Antarctic expedition.
The other was Captain Lawrence Oates. Cherry, as he was known,
was well-liked but ill-suited to polar travel. He couldn't
navigate and his glasses steamed or iced up frequently.
Nevertheless he and two companions made the Worst Journey, a
quest to bag Emperor penguin eggs in the middle of Antarctic
winter. He, Edward Wilson and Birdie Bowers (both later to die
with Scott in a tent eleven miles from safety) set out from Cape
Evans to the rookery at Cape Crozier ('the windiest place on
earth'). Cherry had blistered his hands by day two. They hit
blizzards and whiteouts and temperatures of minus seventy. At
one point Cherry turned his head to speak to Wilson and his hood
froze solid. He couldn't turn back. They used up their oil and
food. They lost their tent. They should have died, but made it
back in pitiful condition. Their clothes had to be chipped off.
Scott wrote: "They look more weatherworn that anyone I have yet
seen. Their faces were scared and wrinkled, their eyes dull,
their hands whitened with constant exposure to damp and cold."
Cherry's description of the events is horrific and moving. But
this isn't just a book about that foolhardy expedition. It is
also about Scott and his doomed party. Cherry was the man who
took the dogs to One Ton Camp to await the doomed polar party.
If he had taken the dogs further on, he might have found the
dying men. This haunted him for the rest of his life and that
sense of regret oozes from the book. This brings added poignancy
to what is the greatest account ever written about men on the
ice - Rob Ryan
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2. A WINTER IN ARABIA by Freya
Stark (1940)
Stark wrote more than 20 books on her travels, but her soul
belonged to Arabia. As well as travel writing, Stark was also an
archaeologist, geographer and historian. The book covers her
trip with two companions - a journey chronicled at the time in
The Times. Between July 18-20, 1938, Stark wrote about their
expedition to the Hadhramaut, in Southern Arabia - now Yemen.
The trio headed to the Frankincense road at Hureidha, as part of
their brief to begin "the systematic and hitherto almost
unattempted excavation of the pre-Islamic sites in this vast
region."
Klik op het boek voor meer info |
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1. THE DANAKIL DIARY: Journeys
through Abyssinia, 1930-4 by Wilfred Thesiger (1996)
Thesiger travelled for three decades from 1930 as an explorer,
military career and historian in Arabia and Africa - but it was
not until the 1960s that he started to set down his stories in
print. Perhaps the best known is his first, Arabian Sands, which
dealt with the Bedouin life in what is now Oman's Empty Quarter.
But in 1996, seven years before his death, he published The
Danakil Diary, which covered his trip more than six decades
earlier to Abyssinia (now Ethiopa), in search of the source of
the Hawash River. As was reported in The Times in November,
1934, not only was the expedition successful, but Thesiger
collected "much valuable information" about the country -
bringing back 880 specimens of birds. The report of his
presentation to The Royal Geographical Society continued: "The
exploration of the Dankali country has always been handicapped
by. the savage disposition of the inhabitants, and only in Aussa,
where the Sultan rules with an iron hand, are peace and security
to be found. Mr.Thesiger was well received by this ruler, and in
his lecture he dealt with the Sultanate of Aussa in some
detail...."
Klik op het boek voor meer info
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Hieronder ziet u een
overzicht van de pakketaanbiedingen van
Reizenoppapier.nl. Klikt u op betreffende
pakketaanbieding, dan komt u in de webwinkel van
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bestellen.
Pakketaanbiedingen Engelstalige boeken
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Pakketaanbieding Times 1 |
€ 30,95 |
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Pakketaanbieding Times 5 |
€ 63,40 |
| Bill Bryson |
Notes from a small island |
€ 10,95 |
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Deze boeken staan niet in de top 20 lijst, maar
zijn nieuwe
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| Bruce Chatwin |
In Patagonia |
€ 10,95 |
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boeken van reizen die zijn gebaseerd op oorspronkelijke
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| Redmond O’Hanlon |
Into the heart of Borneo |
€ 12,95 |
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boeken en reizen uit de lijst. |
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Colin Thubron |
Shadow of the Silk Road 2007 |
€ 11,95 |
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Pakketaanbieding Times 2 |
€ 29,50 |
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Paul Theroux |
Ghost Train to the Eastern star 2009 |
€ 10,95 |
| Alain de Botton |
The Art of Travel |
€ 10,95 |
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| Bill Bryson |
Notes from a small island |
€ 10,95 |
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| Paul Theroux |
The Great Railway Bazaar |
€ 10,95 |
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| Nederlandstalige boeken |
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Pakket Times Nederlands 1 |
€ 38,50 |
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Pakket Times Nederlands 2 |
€ 63,40 |
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Alain de Botton |
De kunst van het Reizen |
€ 12,50 |
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Robert Byron |
De weg naar Oxiana |
€ 24,90 |
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Bruce Chatwin |
In Patagonië |
€ 18,50 |
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Alain de Botton |
De kunst van het Reizen
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€ 12,50 |
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Redmond O’Hanlon |
Naar het hart van Borneo |
€ 07,50 |
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Bruce Chatwin |
In Patagonië |
€ 18,50 |
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Redmond O’Hanlon |
Naar het hart van Borneo |
€ 07,50 |
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Pakket Times Nederlands 3 |
€ 49,80 |
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(de levertijd
voor dit pakket is 5-8 werkdagen) |
Deze boeken staan niet in de
top 20 lijst, maar zijn nieuwe
boeken van reizen die zijn gebaseerd op oorspronkelijke
boeken en reizen uit de lijst. |
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Colin Thubron |
De schaduw van de Zijdroute (2007) |
€ 24,90 |
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Paul Theroux |
De grote spoorwegcarroussel retour (2009) |
€ 24,90 |
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