Tourist in the Arab Spring

In the aftermath of the Arab Spring, war reporters rushed to publish accounts of the uprising. Tom Chesshyre took a different approach - he jumped on a plane and became the first to return to the region as a tourist. The result is the fascinating, street-level tale of a lay traveller's journey through lands fresh from revolution. Chesshyre heads for tourist sites that few have seen in recent years, as well as new 'attractions' like Gaddafi's bombed-out bunker in Tripoli. In a book both touching and humorous, he also describes being abducted in Libya, listening to the sound of Kalashnikovs at night and talking to ordinary people struggling to get by.

Extract from the introduction...

'I was travelling as a tourist, not as a foreign correspondent with a well-thumbed contacts book and a series of appointments. I would take the temperature of the region during a key period in its history - as a casual visitor. I would see what there was to see as a traveller with a guidebook. Yet by talking to people along the way, I'd get a sense of the bigger picture.

That was my hope, at least. Being a tourist would be my way of unlocking the countries. I would take in the wonderful Byzantine ruins of Tunisia, the famous Roman remains in Libya, and the treasures of the pharaohs in Egypt, plus some lovely beaches in the Sinai Peninsula. What would I find out about the Arab Spring as I pottered among the ancient sights? What does an Arab Spring feel like?'

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Tourist in the Arab Spring

In the aftermath of the Arab Spring, war reporters rushed to publish accounts of the uprising. Tom Chesshyre took a different approach - he jumped on a plane and became the first to return to the region as a tourist. The result is the fascinating, street-level tale of a lay traveller's journey through lands fresh from revolution. Chesshyre heads for tourist sites that few have seen in recent years, as well as new 'attractions' like Gaddafi's bombed-out bunker in Tripoli. In a book both touching and humorous, he also describes being abducted in Libya, listening to the sound of Kalashnikovs at night and talking to ordinary people struggling to get by.

Extract from the introduction...

'I was travelling as a tourist, not as a foreign correspondent with a well-thumbed contacts book and a series of appointments. I would take the temperature of the region during a key period in its history - as a casual visitor. I would see what there was to see as a traveller with a guidebook. Yet by talking to people along the way, I'd get a sense of the bigger picture.

That was my hope, at least. Being a tourist would be my way of unlocking the countries. I would take in the wonderful Byzantine ruins of Tunisia, the famous Roman remains in Libya, and the treasures of the pharaohs in Egypt, plus some lovely beaches in the Sinai Peninsula. What would I find out about the Arab Spring as I pottered among the ancient sights? What does an Arab Spring feel like?'

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Tourist in the Arab Spring

Tourist in the Arab Spring

by Tom Chesshyre
Tourist in the Arab Spring

Tourist in the Arab Spring

by Tom Chesshyre

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Overview

In the aftermath of the Arab Spring, war reporters rushed to publish accounts of the uprising. Tom Chesshyre took a different approach - he jumped on a plane and became the first to return to the region as a tourist. The result is the fascinating, street-level tale of a lay traveller's journey through lands fresh from revolution. Chesshyre heads for tourist sites that few have seen in recent years, as well as new 'attractions' like Gaddafi's bombed-out bunker in Tripoli. In a book both touching and humorous, he also describes being abducted in Libya, listening to the sound of Kalashnikovs at night and talking to ordinary people struggling to get by.

Extract from the introduction...

'I was travelling as a tourist, not as a foreign correspondent with a well-thumbed contacts book and a series of appointments. I would take the temperature of the region during a key period in its history - as a casual visitor. I would see what there was to see as a traveller with a guidebook. Yet by talking to people along the way, I'd get a sense of the bigger picture.

That was my hope, at least. Being a tourist would be my way of unlocking the countries. I would take in the wonderful Byzantine ruins of Tunisia, the famous Roman remains in Libya, and the treasures of the pharaohs in Egypt, plus some lovely beaches in the Sinai Peninsula. What would I find out about the Arab Spring as I pottered among the ancient sights? What does an Arab Spring feel like?'


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781841627533
Publisher: Bradt Travel Guides Ltd
Publication date: 03/25/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Tom Chesshyre was born in London in 1971. He has a degree in politics from Bristol University, where he was news editor of the university paper, Epigram. He completed a newspaper journalism diploma at City University, after which he had short stints at the Cambridge Evening News, Sporting Life and Sky Sports. He freelanced for The Daily Telegraph and The Independent before joining the travel desk of The Times in 1997, where he still works. He has helped with the research on two non-fiction books: W. G. by Robert Low, a biography of W. G. Grace, and Carlos: Portrait of a Terrorist by Colin Smith, a biography of "Carlos the Jackal". He is the author of three previous travel books: 'How Low Can You Go? Round Europe for 1p Each-Way (Plus Tax)' published in 2007, 'To Hull and Back: On Holiday in Unsung Britain,' published in 2010, and T'ales from the Fast Trains: Europe at 186mph', published in 2011 and shortlisted in the 2012 British Travel Press Awards. His travel writing has taken him to almost 100 countries. He lives in south-west London.


Tom Chesshyre is staff travel writer for The Times in London.

Table of Contents

1 Tunis and Sidi Bouzid:

Cigarette Smugglers and Hitchhiking Heroes 1

2 Sidi Bouzid and Garaat Bennour:

It Started with a Fruit Seller 12

3 El Jem and Kairouan:

Mosques, Marvels and a Near Miss 31

4 Tunis and Carthage:

Tanks in the Capital 47

5 Djerba:

Lost with the Lotus-eaters 63

6 R'as Ajdir and Tripoli:

Tap, Tap, Tap into the Night 80

7 Leptis Magna:

There is a Tourist? 99

8 Sabratha and Tripoli:

In Brother Leader's Old Bunker 118

9 Benghazi, Cyrene and Qasr al-Haj:

Trouble and Tea 138

10 Cairo:

Salafists on Tahrir Square 160

11 Cairo, Saqqara and Giza:

Pharaohs, Camels and a Yacoubian Building 179

12 Suez and Sharm el-Sheikh:

To a Dismal but Profitable Ditch. and on 201

13 Sharm el-Sheikh, Taba and St Catherine's Monastery:

Smile: you are in Egypt 220

Acknowledgements 243

Bibliography 244

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