In the 1960s & `70s, the overland route from Europe to Asia became popular with disillusioned Westerners seeking what they saw as the paradise of the East. Their journeys are now the stuff of travel legend. Road to Katmandu is the story of Patrick Marnham`s own pilgrimage from Turkey to Nepal in 1968. He travelled over three thousand miles, passing through Ankara to Ararat, Tehran & Mashad, Herat, Kandahar & Kabul, Peshawar, Lahore & Varanasi...before finally reaching Katmandu. His journey is a kaleidoscopic blend of tortuous train journeys & lethal truck drives; wild deserts, mountains & isolated villages. At heart this is the story of a generation that was escaping from the routine of conventional life & of how it found
- or lost
- its way. It provides an alluring insight into the nature of the `hippie trail` & of those who forged it, before cheap air travel shrank the world. Road to Katmandu is an extraordinary testimony to the seductive beauty of the overland trail & a tribute to those who formed its ragamuffin cavalcade
- a travel classic.