Lands of Lost Borders: A Journey on the Silk Road
Written by Kate Harris
Narrated by Amy Landon
4/5
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About this audiobook
Lands of Lost Borders carried me up into a state of openness and excitement I haven’t felt for years. It’s a modern classic."" —Pico Iyer
A brilliant, fierce writer makes her debut with this enthralling travelogue and memoir of her journey by bicycle along the Silk Road—an illuminating and thought-provoking fusion of The Places in Between, Lab Girl, and Wild that dares us to challenge the limits we place on ourselves and the natural world.
As a teenager, Kate Harris realized that the career she craved—to be an explorer, equal parts swashbuckler and metaphysician—had gone extinct. From what she could tell of the world from small-town Ontario, the likes of Marco Polo and Magellan had mapped the whole earth; there was nothing left to be discovered. Looking beyond this planet, she decided to become a scientist and go to Mars.
In between studying at Oxford and MIT, Harris set off by bicycle down the fabled Silk Road with her childhood friend Mel. Pedaling mile upon mile in some of the remotest places on earth, she realized that an explorer, in any day and age, is the kind of person who refuses to live between the lines. Forget charting maps, naming peaks: what she yearned for was the feeling of soaring completely out of bounds. The farther she traveled, the closer she came to a world as wild as she felt within.
Lands of Lost Borders is the chronicle of Harris’s odyssey and an exploration of the importance of breaking the boundaries we set ourselves; an examination of the stories borders tell, and the restrictions they place on nature and humanity; and a meditation on the existential need to explore—the essential longing to discover what in the universe we are doing here.
Like Rebecca Solnit and Pico Iyer, Kate Harris offers a travel account at once exuberant and reflective, wry and rapturous. Lands of Lost Borders explores the nature of limits and the wildness of the self that can never fully be mapped. Weaving adventure and philosophy with the history of science and exploration, Lands of Lost Borders celebrates our connection as humans to the natural world, and ultimately to each other—a belonging that transcends any fences or stories that may divide us.
Kate Harris
Kate Harris is a writer and adventurer with a knack for getting lost. Named one of Canada's top modern-day explorers, her award-winning nature and travel writing has featured in The Walrus, Canadian Geographic Travel, Sidetracked and The Georgia Review, and cited in Best American Essays and Best American Travel Writing. In 2019, she was awarded the RBC Taylor Prize, one of Canada's most esteemed literature awards. She has degrees in science from MIT and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and in the history of science from Oxford, where she studied as a Rhodes scholar. When she isn't away on expeditions, or reporting on UN environmental negotiations for the International Institute for Sustainable Development, Harris lives off-grid in a log cabin on the border of the Yukon, British Columbia and Alaska. This is her first book.
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Reviews for Lands of Lost Borders
89 ratings6 reviews
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5not that interesting,too much of Kate Harris,give it a pass!
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5The best thing I have come across in my life, this book , the story, the story telling, the people in it and the awesome reader
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Fantastic book about traveling in Asia. Very funny stories about riding a bike on the Silk Road.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5After cycling (illegally) across the Tibetan plateau in the university summer vacation, Kate Harris and her primary school friend Melissa come back a few years later to spend a year cycling the entire Silk Road from Istanbul to India. But it turns out that this isn't (just) another of those entertaining stories of punctures, visa problems, goat's-head soup, horrible weather and unwisely-chosen campsites, written to justify the year off from normal life. Harris is a science graduate whose aim since early childhood has been to become an astronaut and go to Mars, and she's also spent part of the time in between the two trips as a Rhodes Scholar in Oxford working on the unintended political impact of scientific exploration, so she spends a lot of time digressing from the day-to-day descriptions of travel into reflections on the meaning and purpose of travel and exploration and her own motives in travelling. She also talks a lot about borders, where they come from and what they mean, in the context of the many borders they have to cross in Central Asia. It's a bit of a mixed bag: there are some very obvious observations and some quite profound ones, and she cites interesting, obscure travellers with the same gusto as she pulls out ubiquitous bits of the quotations dictionary. But overall, I found it a thoughtful, stimulating kind of a travel book, certainly a writer to watch out for in the future.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Silk Road - Marco Polo springs to mind and his travels are referenced, though perhaps not as much as I would wish. There are however repeated references to Mars - and the stars. While this is a perfectly reasonable pre-occupation for the author, most of it seemed out of place in the context of this book, which did not endear it to me - a personal view.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5No real introspection, perhaps because she's always with friends. Though we learn next to nothing about them, either. I think that solo travel gives more interesting stories. Instead, in the personal parts, she throws in random pieces of science history. But only utterly mundane trivia that we all already know. She says that she blew off her degree in science history, and it shows. The writing is always flowery and self-indulgent. Sometimes, it works. But you can only compare yourself to Neil Armstrong so many times before I start to worry about your ego. Maybe I have just read too many of these stories lately, but I also get tired of privileged Western travelers who plop themselves down in random towns, without any plans or any money, unprepared. > I didn't know, despite my best intentions to learn, how to fix a flat tire.> Before we left, the family in Rize scribbled another family's name and phone number on a piece of paper, and in this manner Mel and I were passed like batons between generous friends all across Turkey. The challenge was locating our would-be hosts in the next town, for typically they didn’t speak English. We stumbled on a fail-safe tactic: upon arriving we'd head to a busy sidewalk and call the host family's number. As soon as someone picked up, we'd hand the cellphone to a random (and now very confused) Turkish person.Here are some of the worst and best pieces of writing. You can decide which is which. > The British Antarctic explorer Apsley Cherry-Garrard claimed that "polar exploration is at once the cleanest and most isolated way of having a bad time which has been devised." Winter bike trips in Turkey might be a close second.> When I woke the next morning the tent ceiling was constellated with frost. All the stars seemed alien, ungathered, and for a moment I felt unsure what planet I was on, the sky above suspiciously crimson. Then I spotted an earthly landmark in the tent’s laundry line, where two pairs of wool socks and my watch drooped stiffly. I sat up to check the time and accidentally brushed the tent wall, sending the visible universe into supernova. Frost flaked off the ceiling, the fabric of space-time buckled and creased, frozen socks drop-kicked my lap. It was eight in the morning.> In restricting the range of directions you can travel, in charging ordinary movement with momentum, a bike trip offers that rarest, most elusive of things in our frenetic world: clarity of purpose. Your sole responsibility on Earth, as long as your legs last each day, is to breathe, pedal, breathe—and look around. … Every day on a bike trip is like the one before—but it is also completely different, or perhaps you are different, woken up in new ways by the mile. If anything, the world grew more inscrutable the longer I looked at it, and the less focused I was on the brute mechanics of pedaling—aching legs and lungs, kilometers covered and kilometers to come—the more awake I could be to the world around me, its ordinary wonders.> After all, the term metaphor comes from the Greek meta (above) and pherein (to carry)—to be carried above, a flight into connection, so that after traveling long and far enough every mountain reminds you of another mountain, every river summons another river, and you learn enough landmarks by which to love the whole world> The flock poured over the land like light, at once particle and wave, moving up the mountain with a liquid grace that left me stunned.