TRUE STORY: CHAPTER ONE – “GOLDILOCKS”

MAY 21, 2022 – Blogger’s Foreword: Having completed yesterday an account of my “Grand Odyssey,” I searched the world inside my head for a sequel project; for writer and reader alike, something more challenging, if not more edifying, than my daily dose of 500 words pre-dating the “Grand Account.” I landed upon an ambitious experiment. It’s …

FULL CIRCLE

MAY 20, 2022 – In early December I flew from Heathrow to JFK. In New York I presented my passport for the last time on my Grand Odyssey. It contained so many stamps I’d had to have extra pages added by the U.S. Embassy in Stockholm, and the cover was so worn, the gold lettering …

ENGLAND

MAY 19, 2022 – The train out of Berlin sped through East Germany to Hoek van Holland. From there I caught a ferry to Harwich, England. After so many months and countries of the world, it seemed strange to be surrounded by English once again. Having started my Grand Odyssey in New Zealand, linguistically I’d …

SMILING AT THE FUTURE

MAY 16, 2022 – Blogger’s note: I must take another break from The Grand Odyssey to recount the delight that my wife and I enjoyed last weekend. Recently, our six-and-a-half-year-old granddaughter asked, “Can I go to the cabin?” On Friday, we seized the initiative, and after getting the green light from Illiana’s parents, my wife …

GOD AS GOLFER IS MY CHEERLEADER

MAY 11, 2022 – Blogger’s note: Something so extraordinary happened to me yesterday, I felt compelled to write aboiut it today, interrupting my travel blog series on Siberia. Tomorrow’s post will resume my account of the “Grand Odyssey.” I take my daily hike in “Little Switzerland.” In reality, it’s a hilly golf course in St. …

ALONG A LONG RAILWAY (PART VIII OF A LONG SERIES)

MAY 9, 2022 – As previously noted, for nine of my 14 days aboard the 18-carriage Trans-Siberian train, I was the sole Westerner aboard, which fact conferred upon me celebrity status, especially given that I was from the leading nation of the West. My unique position allowed me to optimize my time and interactions with …

ALONG A LONG RAILWAY (PART VII OF A LONG SERIES)

MAY 8, 2022 – My other prized souvenir from the Trans-Siberian train (see yesterday’s post) was the (real) silver, commemorative Russian tea glass holder impressed with an image of the Kremlin, “CCCP” (“USSR”), and “50,” marking the half-century since the (“glorious”) October Revolution of 1917. These exquisite tea glass holders were available for use aboard …

ALONG A LONG RAILWAY (PART V OF A LONG SERIES)

MAY 6, 2022 – Across my many conversations with Russians aboard the train, I endeavored to find consensus about one subject or another, such as national self-perception, for example, and impression of the United States, and most sensitive at the time—attitudes about the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. One person’s opinion is only a data point, …

ALONG A LONG RAILWAY (PART IV OF A LONG SERIES)

MAY 5, 2022 – After describing the scenery outside the train, my letter home focused on the highlight of the journey: my interaction with fellow passengers. “By living with Russians for 24 hours a day, for days on end,” I wrote, “I gained much understanding about their thinking and their way of life. I must …

ALONG A LONG RAILWAY (PART II OF A LONG SERIES)

MAY 3, 2022 – My trip along the Trans-Siberian Railway was a signature experience; one revealing the paradoxical axiom that at once our world is too vast to comprehend and too small not to cherish. Timing was everything. The weather brought blizzards to some parts of Siberia, making the trip ever more Zhivagoan than it …

MOSCOW BY METRO

MAY 1, 2022 – In Moscow I took mini-expeditions via the Metro. With a Metro map from my hotel, I found the closest station and entered the most ornately beautiful subway system in the world—and so far below the surface, it doubled as a far-flung bomb shelter. It was said that Lenin believed the workers …

AROUND . . . RED SQUARE

APRIL 30, 2022 – In laying plans for my sojourn in Russia, I’d learned that Western tourists had no choice but to stay at deluxe hotels . . . and pay in advance (hence the “payment voucher”) with convertible currency at the official exchange rate. One bonus of this arrangement was access to a large …

INTO THE HEART OF OLD MUSCOVY

APRIL 29, 2022 – If you view Russia on a globe, you’ll see that the country is so vast, as the sun sets in the Russian Far East, it rises on St. Petersburg, f/k/a Leningrad, in the far west. For my three days in Leningrad, I’d barely reached Peter the Great’s “window to the West.” …

“ON TO THE FINLAND STATION” (PART IV OF IV)

APRIL 28, 2022 – My tour of Leningrad was mostly self-directed—strolling along the canals, admiring the Italian architecture, the Bronze Horseman (statue of Peter the Great on horseback; commissioned by Catherine the Great); and inspecting the Aurora (the Russian cruiser that fired a blank shell to signal the beginning of the October 1917 Revolution). In …