Not Just Spinning Your Wheels

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Touring a new city on foot or by bicycle provides perspectives not possible from car or bus. The folks at Rapha, sellers of very hip cycling gear, get this and have created a marvelous series of European urban travel guidebooks.

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The eight pocket-sized, retro-styled books, which come in a nifty slipcase, provide detailed information on sightseeing attractions, food & drink options, wifi hotspots, bike shops and more. They also offer great maps and suggested neighborhood tours of less visited districts.

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If you love a good travel guidebook (even if you’re a non-biker) , this colorful collection of illustrated, pocket guides to major European cities will provide street-level perspective and tons of local knowledge missing from traditional guidebooks.

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Terror of the Soul

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This month marks the 164th anniversary of the mysterious death of Edgar Allan Poe and the opening of the exciting new exhibition called Edgar Allan Poe: Terror of the Soul at New York City’s amazing Morgan Library and Museum. The grim and terrifying works of Edgar Allan Poe have chilled and thrilled readers for almost two centuries. The recently opened Morgan Library exhibition—inspired by the preface to Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque—explores Poe’s poetry, fiction, and literary criticism, with a key thematic emphasis examining his profound influence on later writers. The exhibition, which runs until January 26,2014, features nearly one hundred items, drawn primarily from the Morgan’s holdings and The Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature at The New York Public Library, two of the most important collections of Poe material in the United States.  Poe’s mastery of multiple writing genres is represented by poem and short story manuscripts, early printed editions, letters, and literary criticism published in contemporary newspapers, magazines, and journals. On view are such works as Annabel Lee and The Bells in Poe’s own hand; one of the earliest printings of The Raven; the first printing of The Cask of Amontillado; and an unprecedented three copies of Tamerlane, Poe’s earliest published work and one of the rarest books in American literature. Lesser-known writings, including A Reviewer Reviewed—Poe’s never-before-exhibited critique of his own work, written under a pseudonym—and the author’s annotated copy of his last published book, Eureka, provide a more complete picture of this complex writer.

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A first edition copy of The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, Poe’s only novel, is also shown. Although Poe described his seafaring tale as a “very silly book,” its influence can be detected in Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, Henry James’s The Golden Bowl, and works by Jules Verne, among others. Also on display is one of only three existing manuscript sheets of The Lighthouse, another terror tale of the sea, which remained incomplete at the time of Poe’s death.

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The exhibition also has an 1843 printed edition of “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” the first of Poe’s three detective tales featuring an impoverished French aristocrat named C. Auguste Dupin, who served as the model for another famous detective character, Sherlock Holmes. This connection is highlighted in the exhibition with the display of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s autograph manuscript of The Hound of the Baskervilles.  Terror of the Soul is among the first museum exhibitions to explore Poe’s wide-ranging influence on fellow writers as diverse as Charles Dickens, Stéphane Mallarmé, Vladimir Nabokov, and Terry Southern. Other literary masterpieces on view include Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Hound of the Baskervilles, Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray, and Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde; Paul Auster’s previously unpublished lecture on Poe’s influence on French authors; and T. S. Eliot’s annotated typescript of The Waste Land.

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Just In time for Halloween

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I was browsing in the remodeled store of a local book chain and ran across some amazing new editions from Penguin that sport covers curated by Academy Award-winning filmmaker and sci fi/horror writer Guillermo del Torro. The series, which includes some popular classic tales from Poe, Shelley, Lovecraft and Bradbury, has marvelous cover art by Paul Buckley.

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Free WiFi for Travelers

One of the most frequent complaints that I hear from travelers these days is the lack of free WiFi hotspots. Well the city of Tel Aviv, Israel has stepped-up and addressed the problem by installing a network of eighty WiFi hotspots around the city at every major tourist attraction , including all of the city’s popular beaches. Hopefully other cities will take note and start building their own free WiFi networks.

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Discover Budapest

H/T to TBTP reader Rita from the website Love My Vouchers for this fun infographic (see below) on incredible Budapest.

After spending a delightful week in Budapest this Spring, I’ve become an ardent proselytizer for the charms of Hungary’s capital. All of the travel guidebooks and websites promote the city’s fantastic natural setting straddling the River Danube, its fabulous architecture, magnificent bridges and remnants of Hapsburg grandeur, but they go astray with unnecessary comparisons to other great capitals like Prague and Vienna. Yes, Budapest has grand, imperial buildings and historic coffeehouses, but it also has artfully decaying neighborhoods and a gritty charisma that has not been found in Vienna for a generation, and has been Disney-fied away in Prague in the last decade. And, thankfully, it’s not yet overrun by hipsters, artistic poseurs and techie wannabees like Berlin.

The only way to judge for yourself is to go there.

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This Could Be Handy

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Funded with $230,000 from Indiegogo, the SIGMO Voice Translator is a little gadget that helps users speak and understand more than twenty-five languages with the touch of a button. Potentially revolutionizing the way travelers communicate, the tiny translator may be the answer to understanding conversation quickly in an unfamiliar environment. Used dually with a free app a SIGMO owner need only speak into the device and it instantly and audibly translates their words in any chosen language.

 The portable SIGMO device has two modes of voice translation. By simply setting the native language, and the language to translate to via a smartphone running an Android or IOS operating system, a user is on their way to communication no matter what the circumstances. SIGMO connects to the smartphone through Bluetooth and the translation itself is made through an already existing service like Google Translate. By pressing the device’s first button and speaking a phrase into it SIGMO will instantly translate and pronounce the words audibly via a small speaker in a language the user has previously selected. By pressing the second button SIGMO will translate speech from the foreign language and instantly say the phrase in the user’s native language.

 The SIGMO free app allows for the change of languages and the adjustment of speaker volume to suit location and ambient noise levels. Small in size SIGMO can be worn around the neck, attached to clothing or belts, or strapped to the arm with an attachment much like a watch.

Founders David Barnett and Marti Karrer came up with the idea for SIGMO while traveling. They plan to charge $50 to $65 per unit when they are available this winter.

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La Tour Paris

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La Tour Paris 13 is a unique street art event that has transformed a derelict Seine-side apartment building in the 13th arrondissment  into a ten story installation. The free event, which runs through the month of October, has covered the exterior, interior hallways and 36 vacant apartments with work by 105 artists from 18 countries. The project was organized by Galerie Itinerrance which focuses on urban contemporary art.

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Does Not Translate

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Do you ever get that melancholy sense of dépaysement when you’re traveling far from home? Does the lambent glow of Autumn kindle the wonder of komorebi for you ? Or, does it encourage you to seek the sublime feeling of Waldeinsamkeit ?

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Artist Ella Frances Sanders has cleverly illustrated some of these marvelous but elusive words which have no single equivalent in English. See how many you can slip into your conversations today. Maybe during a pleasant sobremesa session. But mind that culaccino.

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Better In Than Out (redux)

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The elusive Banksy continues to take NYC by storm with his diverse and random art bombs. One of the most recent creations is an ordinary delivery truck transformed into a mobile garden space complete with an actual waterfall. This component of Banksy’s “Better In Than Out” series will be appearing at different locations around the city every evening. Viewers can learn more about the installation right here or call 1-800-656-4271 for audio commentary and information.

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Travel Better London (with poetry)

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Transport For London (TFL) has partnered with London poets to encourage Tube riders to be respectful, courteous and mindful. The overarching goal of the project is to encourage what they call Poetiquette: Patience, Helpfulness, Courtesy and Awareness.

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Along with celebration of National Poetry Day last week at major Underground stations, TFL has sponsored poetry posters and a website for public transit poets to share their work.

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