Lecture: Stories and Revelations from a Postmodern Travel Writer
Rolf Potts has reported from more than sixty countries for the likes of National Geographic Traveler, The New Yorker, Slate.com and Outside. His adventures have included piloting a fishing boat 900 miles down the Laotian Mekong, hitchhiking across Eastern Europe, traversing Israel on foot, bicycling across Burma, driving a Land Rover across South America. Potts is perhaps best known for promoting the ethic of independent travel and his book on the subject, Vagabonding: An Uncommon Guide to the Art of Long-Term World Travel. His most recent book, Marco Polo Didn't Go There: Stories and Revelations from One Decade as a Postmodern Travel Writer, became the first American-authored book to win Italy's prestigious Chatwin Prize. Though he rarely stays in one place for more than a few weeks or months, Potts feels somewhat at home in Bangkok, Cairo, Pusan, New Orleans, and north-central Kansas, where he keeps a small farmhouse on thirty acres near his family. Part of the Symposium on Wildness, Wilderness & the Creative Imagination.