The Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen (classic introspective journey in Nepal)
River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze by Peter Hessler (knowing the Yangtze is a lifelong project)
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt (a novel through Vegas! NYC! Amsterdam!)
and of course…
Upstate Pizza Guy in India and Nepal: Notes from a Drifting Road by Freddie Hoose (a subcontinent-spanning loop of over 13,000 km)
Cheers!
]]>This book inspired me to visit the Sunderbans, a group of semi-inhabited tidal channel islands in the Gangetic delta, where regular life is at the mercy of the elements of nature, more often fearsome than kind. It is a few hours road journey from Kolkata.
For the local islanders, tourism is one of the means of livelihood and we took a daylong boat ride down the distributaries of the Ganges upto the Bay of Bengal and then back. We had lunch of freshly caught fish on the boat and spent a lazy day cruising through the waters in the cool seaside breeze. However, the calm and idyll is deceptive, as the locals are always wary of crocodiles and the Bengal tiger lurking in the muddy waters of the delta.
The delta is also home to the Gangetic dolphins but we were unfortunate and didn’t sight any. We, however, did see the forest officials take away a tranquillised Bengal tiger on a boat to probably a wildlife centre.
Staying overnight there is a thrill of sorts as one has to do without electricity and with only basic amenities at hand. That’s the plan the next time I visit there. Another plan is to try the local honey that the islanders collect from the jungles of Sundari trees, braving the threat of the tigers and cyclonic storms.
Overall, it is a place tucked away from “normal” civilisation and closer to nature in all the senses.
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