Bookbot

Jeff Greenwald

    La carriera narrativa di Jeff Greenwald è alimentata da una vita di viaggi avventurosi, spesso disastrosi, iniziata con il suo primo sfortunato viaggio all'estero a diciassette anni. I suoi racconti e saggi approfondiscono le complessità del viaggio, trasformando gli imprevisti in ricco materiale per narrazioni avvincenti che esplorano l'esperienza umana. Il lavoro di Greenwald offre ai lettori una prospettiva unica, andando oltre le semplici destinazioni per scoprire gli impatti più profondi dell'avventurarsi nel mondo.

    108 Beloved Objects [PAPERBACK]
    Shopping for Buddhas
    The Best Tennis of Your Life
    Planeta Star Trek
    • 108 Beloved Objects [PAPERBACK]

      Letting Go of Stuff, Keeping Our Stories

      • 250pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      Exploring the significance of personal belongings, this photo-memoir recounts the stories behind 108 cherished objects from the author's life as a travel journalist. Each item reflects memories of adventure, connection, and emotion, organized into six thematic realms: Travel, Gifts, Love, Earth Moon & Stars, Endings, and Spirit. The choice of 108 objects holds spiritual meaning in various cultures. Accompanied by evocative photography, the narrative invites readers to reflect on their own connections to the things they hold dear.

      108 Beloved Objects [PAPERBACK]2022
    • The Best Tennis of Your Life

      • 148pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      Offers specific strategies and tools that can help players to play the best tennis of their life. This title provides a glimpse into the mental game that gets to the heart of a player's inner struggle. It includes numerous examples that highlight the impact of the mind on personal performance.

      The Best Tennis of Your Life2008
      4,1
    • Shopping for Buddhas

      • 224pagine
      • 8 ore di lettura

      Jeff Greenwald's classic travelogue follows his quest for the "perfect" Buddha statue. At turns hilarious and moving, his quest features a cast of amazing characters — from a passionate palmist to a flying lama — who provide unforgettable glimpses into the daily life and culture of the former kingdom (including a wild ride on Kathmandu’s very first escalator). Greenwald doesn't shy away from Shangri-la’s darker side. Along with colorful descriptions of Hindu and Buddhist mythology, the book tells of the rampant corruption, art smuggling, assassination attempts and human right abuses that would ignite Nepal’s violent "People Power" Revolution in April 1990. A new afterword by the author recounts Nepal's tumultuous recent history — including the massacre of the royal family — in vivid detail. And a new preface introduces this 25th anniversary edition with some thoughts about how Nepal, and travel writing, have evolved since the book’s first publication. Shopping for Buddhas remains a must-read for anyone who has visited, or plans to visit, Nepal.

      Shopping for Buddhas1996
      3,6