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| Dreaming of Jupiter | 
enlarge | Author: Ted Simon Publisher: Abacus Category: Book
List Price: £9.99 Buy Used: £2.86 You Save: £7.13 (71%)
New (28) from £4.05
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 10059
Media: Paperback Pages: 448 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 1.3
ISBN: 0349119600 EAN: 9780349119601 ASIN: 0349119600
Publication Date: April 3, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: Please allow 5 to 7 days for delivery. Help us recycle and plant trees, we donate 5p to the Woodland Trust for every book sold.
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i agree.. act your age September 21, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I had read an original copy from the 1970's of Jupiter Travels.. which was good but not as good as 'The Bone Man of Banares'. I thought when I was reading the original book... what's the point of this trip? especially as he broke the trip and flew home from India at one point.. sort of cheating.. This book was even more of a pointless cheat.. would have made a better book if he's just got a round-the-world air ticket and revisited all those places and people from the first trip.. hire a car to get to the remote places and camp out.. that's what I would have done. There's also a sad sort of jaded and lack-lustre feel to this whole story, as he really feels his age.. Also of note is the way christianity creeps into this book, as it wasn't a factor in the first book, as he was young'ish and foot-loose, but here he seems to think a tiny bit about it, but rejects it. Perhaps it was the idea that an ordinary trip wouldn't sell as a story.. but it could have been interesting, and revisit new places as well.. the 'relationship' with the orientalist-enthusiast was also just plain sad.. dont bother reading this one.. read the 'Bone Man of Banares' instead.. he had a reason to travel around the world.. to escape the vietnam war...
first few chapters depressing but then full of richness June 13, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I nearly put this book down in the first 80 pages-Ted Simons finds anti-climax at every corner-people he met in the 70s have gone-the world seems full of litter and is now built up where once was paradise. However I began to realise that his honesty is part of the author's strength . He equally describes the beauty of Africa-the thrill of the high Andes , the stunning Australian outback and the kindness of strangers.We are left with an impression that it is still a wonderful world out there but it needs protecting.When I look back at Jupiter's travels he also describes misery filth and poverty amongst beauty .Why did that not affect me in the same way when I first read it? It probably did .We look back at Jupiter's travels through rose tinted glasses and I'm sure we will do the same with this book.It is a classic which took me from my hammock in the garden to the wild high places of the world and gently back again-Well worth reading
A remarkable journey by a remarkable man February 21, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Ted Simon is a very remarkable man and, in his 70's, to undertake a 59,000 mile motorcycle journey visiting 47 countries is little short of astonishing. And he did all this without back up teams of people to support him or arrange his visas or anything else, but on his own. However, it is a very different book to Jupiter's Travels. I think this is possibly explained by Ted himself in chapter 27 -'It seemed to me impossible to say anything upbeat and optimistic about the changes I had seen'. Whilst Jupiter's Travels was full of optimism - indeed Ted describes himself seeing 'in the world of the seventies a kind of innocence' - the world of the new millenium is rather less so. Vastly improved communication has destroyed the innocence. The immolation of the twin towers, and America's reaction to it, has created a very different world. So Dreaming of Jupiter is not an optimistic book, but may well give you much food for thought. The good news is that Ted is an optimist himself, because only an optimist could have undertaken this journey, not once, but twice. Highly recommended.
Don't try to re-visit your youth August 30, 2007 9 out of 13 found this review helpful
As a sequel to one of the seminal books of my youth I was looking forward to this hugely. I was very disappointed and eventually abandoned the quest for any deep insight, skimming the last third. Any sense of adventure in Simon's repeat journey is quashed by concerns of liaisons with film crews in Africa and trying to update a website as he goes. The whole thing becomes a compromise and totally against the spirit of going with the flow and freeing up the mind that imbued the adventures of the first book. This is unhappily summed up in Simon's closing paragraph where he's casting around for a catchy last line. He alludes, weakly I thought, to the dreams and aspirations apparently captured in his face in a photograph taken during the first journey. This fudge compares very unfavourably with the magical last line from his first book '...an enchanted land perhaps, where men can still dream of being Gods.'
Dreams are made of this......... April 18, 2007 20 out of 20 found this review helpful
As with the original Jupiters Travels extremely well written,this extraordinary book is imaginative, thought provoking and inspiring to any reader not just lonely adventure bikers. Reading the two books gives a great comparison of the developing world and reflects on the population expansion issues of our greedy western civilisation whilst from a biker angle reads with continual interest ..Well recommended ..you need never have worn leathers, dropped a bike or stripped an engine to enjoy! but you will need to have been in love at least once in your life to understand some of the deeper moments.
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