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Where the Pavement Ends: One Woman's Bicycle Trip through Mongolia, China, & Vietnam [Hardcover]

Erika Warmbrunn
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Mar 1 2001
    "In the middle of the night I crawled out of my tent into a silvery vastness truly unchanged since Genghis Khan and his hordes loped west more than half a millennium ago. There was no glow of city lights on the horizon, no ranger station at the edge of the next valley, no quaint general store, no paved road. There was nothing but space, unbounded and untamed. A brilliant moon lit the blackness crystal clear. Moonshadows of every blade of grass danced silently in the wildness. It was the emptiest, quietest place I had ever been. I threw my arms out wide and spun slowly around and around in the dazzling clarity of the night, the stars blurring into ribbons of light above me."

Mongolia. It was Erika Warmbrunn's dream. To escape deep into parts of Asia inaccessible to tours and guidebooks, to abandon herself to the risks of the unknown. And so, with only a bicycle named Greene for a traveling companion, she set off on an eight month, 8,000 kilometer trek that stretched across the steppes of this ancient land, on through China, and down the length of Vietnam. Freed by Greene's two wheels from the tyranny of discrete points on a map, she found that the true merit of travel was not in the simple seeing, but in flowing with the unexpected adventure or invitation, in savoring the moments in between-the daily challenges of new words and customs, the tiny triumphs of learning a new way of life, the daunting thrill of never knowing what the next day would bring.

Wanting to ride a Mongolian horse and finding herself in the saddle for four hours, herding fifty head of cattle. Asking for a hotel in a Chinese village and being taken into a family's home to share their grandmother's bed for the night. Pedaling into the Vietnamese highlands and being stopped along the muddy road by a father asking that she join his two-year-old son's birthday party. Accepting a Mongolian village's invitation to stop pedaling and stay for a while, to live with them and teach them English. In the doing and the telling, Where the Pavement Ends is a much richer experience than any line on a map can show.

Where the Pavement Ends is the recipient of the Barbara Savage Miles From Nowhere Memorial Award.


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From Amazon

Living in Seattle and failing to make her mark as an actress, Erika Warmbrunn decides to chuck it all and go traveling. Her resulting novel, Where the Pavement Ends, is an absorbing account of her ambitious eight-month solo bicycle trip through the countries of Mongolia, China, and Vietnam. While Warmbrunn's accounts of the travails of traveling in far-off lands doesn't necessarily break new ground, she writes with humor and candor. If you have even a twinge of wanderlust, you'll appreciate this book. Her adventure begins in Mongolia, where she cycles past curious onlookers in dusty towns with names like Khatgal and Moron. Abandoning her set-in-stone itinerary, she spends a memorable month in the village of Ashaant teaching English to schoolchildren and living in a traditional ger (tent). In China she braves the cold and nerve-racking interrogation but is awed by the Great Wall and intrigued by fellow backpackers' tales, told over noodles and beer. By the time she reaches Vietnam, with the frenetic Saigon and its ever-present reminders of the war, she is psychically and emotionally spent. Four thousand miles is a long way to go--even when it's a journey in search of self. --Jill Fergus

From Library Journal

In 1993, this 27-year-old American woman set off alone from Irkutsk in Siberia and eight months later ended up 5000 miles away in Saigon. Hers was not so much a test of endurance, although there was plenty to endure such as eating sheep's head in Mongolia, confronting bureaucratic hassles in China, and fending off overly eager children in Vietnam but rather a journey of self-discovery. She stopped for a month to teach school along the way and took public transportation a couple of times. She writes poignantly and frankly of the dilemmas caused by First World low-budget travelers in Third World countries. Should they pay more than locals, what hospitality and privileges should they expect, and what should their impact be on the people they encounter? She confesses to occasional bad behavior, exasperation, and a lack of sensitivity. Travels such as hers are not so rare today, but thoughtful, honest, insightful writing about the cross-cultural experience is. A fine addition to public libraries; highly recommended. Harold M. Otness, formerly with Southern Oregon Univ. Lib., Ashland
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Sandwiched between Russia and China, Mongolia is a harsh, beautiful, windswept land of extremes. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm not Lance April 9 2003
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
The good news is, I really liked this book. The bad news is that when I finished it I quit my job, sold the house, drained my IRA and bought a bicycle.

If you have ever traveled in the third world and experienced the mixed emotions of being a rich American in a poor country you will recognize yourself in this story. From the priceless experiences she has with people who let her into their homes and into their worlds, to those who have had much more experience with wealthy Western travelers and make their livings from them, she captures the two sides of this kind of travel.

This is a book about a journey, not an expedition. Unlike so many books of this genre, the author parks her ego at the door. While riding a bike, especially as far as she does, is an athletic accomplishment this is not a book about an athlete. She does not try to impress us about how many kilometers she rides a day or how difficult a particular mountain pass was to climb. This is the story of a journey by an intelligent and introspective woman who is interested in getting away from the hippie travel circuit and seeing places she is told not to go and learning about people you will not see from the train or meet in the tourist hotel.

How wonderful it must be to have all you really need with you on your bike and not really care that you don't know exactly where you are.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A Pageturner! Feb 22 2004
Format:Hardcover
I enjoyed this book and oftentimes found the narrative absorbing. I was astonished by the contrasts particularly between Mongolia, with its frigid weather, expansive plains and childlike adults, and Vietnam, with its tropical beaches and aggressive, war-weary toddlers! Attention to detail really enlivened the book. I particularly liked the linguistic asides and descriptions of different foods. I always looked forward to the pictures, although I sorely missed a photo of Beijing. The chapter about the author's trip over a dangerous Chinese mountain on her way to Xiangning was loaded with suspense! But then there was no resolution. After her harrowing experience, we needed to see her actually arrive in Xiangning.

The book needed an epilogue, with the author safely ensconsced in her apartment in Vladivostok or Seattle, observing her surroundings and providing the reader with a final sense of perspective.

And it would've been great for there to be an index in the back, so the reader could easily look up a word or reference that might've appeared 100 pages hence. I had to stick a post-it on page 42 so I could keep looking up the word "orom"!

I hope the author elects to do this again in a completely different part of the world.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring idea Mar 11 2003
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I picked up this book in anticipation of summer travels and was looking to get a woman's perspective on some of the places I will be going. I enjoyed reading about her different adventures, but ultimately was a little annoyed and bored. Her story was inspiring and what she did was amazing, but the way it was written was rather flat. And, I feel that if you are going to include pictures in your book, they should have accurate labels as to who they are of and when they were taken. In all, an okay book but not a stellar read.
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Most recent customer reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars A Travelogue to the Unknown
I found so much interesting firsthand information about Mongolia, China, and VietNam in this interesting book and for that I am grateful to the author. Read more
Published on Feb 21 2003 by BeachReader
4.0 out of 5 stars a little too touristy for me
As a fan of Mongolian culture and a bike rider, these aspects most appealed to me. I was surprised that she would go on such a long ride with such little bike repair knowledge. Read more
Published on Dec 24 2002 by Robert W. Vonmoss
5.0 out of 5 stars A Hologram? Holograph? Both!
Erika Warmbrunn's virtual images -- vivid, insightful, three-dimentional word-pictures -- make for great reading! Read more
Published on Dec 5 2002 by Michael Dupree
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding
I snagged Where the Pavement Ends at the public library, adding it on impulse to an armful of beach reads. Read more
Published on Aug 18 2002 by Eliot Press
5.0 out of 5 stars WHAT A TRIP...WISH YOU WERE HERE
THE WRAPPINGS WERE STILL ON MY LAP AND I WAS ALREADY IN MONGOLIA WITH ERIKA AS SHE WAS DEALING WITH HER FRUSTATIONS OF LACK OF PREPARATION AND PHYSICAL TRAINING. Read more
Published on Nov 11 2001 by G. Bowser
2.0 out of 5 stars disappointing
i anxiously awaited the arrival of this book, as i plan a bicycle tour of mongolia in 2003.
note: too fixated on being the "first".
too whingey. Read more
Published on Oct 17 2001 by janet north
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring
Erika's story is inspiring. The amazing people she met all along her trip, the problems she encountered all make for fascinating reading. Read more
Published on Sep 7 2001 by Jeremy
5.0 out of 5 stars A spiritually uplifting trip into the Far East
The author did a wonderful job of describing the people, places, and different foods that she encountered on her trip into Mongolia, China, and Vietnan. Read more
Published on July 15 2001
5.0 out of 5 stars An Inspiration
Fabulous trip, exquisite tale.
Published on April 11 2001 by GRACE RICKARD
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating
I was so absorbed by this book from the first page that I didn't want it to end. Not only does Ms. Warmbrunn have a gift with words that captivates you from the beginning, she... Read more
Published on April 2 2001
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