BOOKMONGER Reconsidering travel NEW GO KART TRACK NOW OPEN! GO KARTS MINI GOLF GYROXTREME ROCK WALL KIDDIE RIDES AND MORE! SEASIDE, OREGON HWY 101 (1/4 mi South of Seaside) • 2735 S. Roosevelt • 503-738-2076 OPEN DAILY 11 A M T O 6 P M 14 // COASTWEEKEND.COM With vaccination rates climbing, Ameri- cans are beginning to travel again. I’m taking baby steps with a hiking trip in Eastern Ore- gon next week. Two new books about travel have whet my appetite for more. Now based in Seattle, Pam Mandel was an aimless California kid just out of high school in the early 1980s when her dad sent her to spend the summer working on a kibbutz in Israel. “The Same River Twice” is her memoir of an adolescence impacted by her parents’ divorce and her bumpy coming of age as she wanders through the Mediterranean, hitch- hikes across Europe, and eventually winds up traveling through Pakistan and India. “It did not matter so much where I was; the important thing was where I was not,” she wrote. She was not at her dad’s house, buff eted by the fi nancial and legal chaos that would eventually land him in prison. She was not working in the stock room of a clothing store at the mall in her beige California suburb. She was not in college, which she thought she might want to get to someday but was not yet ready to take on. In addition to writing about her trav- els, Mandel wrote about her journey. The former revolves around the meals; the street life; the archaeology; muse- ums; and sunsets. The latter refl ects on the work she performed; the mistakes she made; and the abusive boyfriend she continued to tolerate until fi nally, one day, she didn’t anymore. You’ve likely heard that saying, “Growing old ain’t for sissies?” Nei- ther is coming of age. This is a heart-pierc- ing book. I’d also like to call your attention to a new guidebook called “Hidden Travel.” Stephen W. Brock is writer and photog- rapher who has traveled to over 50 coun- tries in his work for National Geographic and other publications. He is based in Auburn, Washington. This wise guide doesn’t emphasize the what and the where of travel. Instead, it helps you think about the why and the how. I don’t think I’m alone in wishing for a post-pandemic society that is willing to rein- vent itself for the better. In its quiet way, “Hidden Travel” seems to address that yearn- ing. Yes, Brock off ers fresh perspectives on planning and packing — but more than that, he delves into many diff erent ways you might This week’s books ‘The Same River Twice’ by Pam Mandel Skyhorse Publishing — 240 pages — $24.99 ‘Hidden Travel’ by Stephen W. Brock Sublimity Press — 300 pages — $15.99 transform your travels from a conventional “been there, seen that” checklist to a soul-re- plenishing sojourn. The lovely thing about it is you can as eas- ily apply these lessons to your trip to the gro- cery store as to your trip overseas. Brock spices this book with vignettes from his own and others’ travel experiences, along with thought-provoking homilies from a range of folks who have traveled through time before us (St. Augustine, A.A. Milne, etc.) He shares dozens of photos from his trips to off - the-beaten track places all across the globe. You’ll want to get out your duff el and start packing immediately. But before you do, pick up this book. The Bookmonger is Barbara Lloyd McMi- chael, who writes this weekly column focus- ing on the books, authors and publishers of the Pacifi c Northwest. Contact her at bar- baralmcm@gmail.com.