Compare prices and save on cheap books at CheapestBookPrice.com
Compare prices and save on cheap books at CheapestBookPrice.com HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Go to CheapestBookPrice USA!Go to CheapestBookPrice UK!
Multi-Store Book Search
  
(What's this?)
Selected Product:

Walking the Gobi: 1,600 Mile-trek Across a Desert of Hope and Despair
Walking the Gobi: 1,600 Mile-trek Across a Desert of Hope and Despair

Hardcover
Author: Helen Thayer
Publisher: Mountaineers Books
Release Date: 2007-09-30
ISBN-10: 159485064X
ISBN-13: 9781594850646
List Price: $23.95
Average Customer Rating:
Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0
Similar Products

Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time
Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time
ISBN-10: 0143038257
ISBN-13: 9780143038252
List Price:$15.00


Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.)
Shadow of the Silk Road (P.S.)
ISBN-10: 0061231770
ISBN-13: 9780061231773
List Price:$15.95


Polar Dream: The First Solo Expedition by a Woman and Her Dog to the Magnetic North Pole
Polar Dream: The First Solo Expedition by a Woman and Her Dog to the Magnetic North Pole
ISBN-10: 0939165457
ISBN-13: 9780939165452
List Price:$15.00


In the Shadow of a Rainbow: The True Story of a Friendship Between Man and Wolf
In the Shadow of a Rainbow: The True Story of a Friendship Between Man and Wolf
ISBN-10: 0393314529
ISBN-13: 9780393314526
List Price:$14.95


Three Among the Wolves: A Couple and Their Dog Live a Year with Wolves in the Wild
Three Among the Wolves: A Couple and Their Dog Live a Year with Wolves in the Wild
ISBN-10: 1570613982
ISBN-13: 9781570613982
List Price:$22.95


Our Review: To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Walking the Gobi: 1,600 Mile-trek Across a Desert of Hope and Despair by Helen Thayer (ISBN-10: 159485064X, ISBN-13: 9781594850646).

At this time we have not yet written a review for Walking the Gobi: 1,600 Mile-trek Across a Desert of Hope and Despair by Helen Thayer (ISBN-10: 159485064X, ISBN-13: 9781594850646). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews.

Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com

Summary:
By the bestselling author of Polar Dream (more than 40,000 copies sold) At the age of 63, Helen Thayer fulfilled her lifelong dream of crossing Mongolia's Gobi Desert. Accompanied by her 74-year-old husband Bill and two camels, Tom and Jerry, Thayer walked 1600 miles in 126-degree temperatures, battling fierce sandstorms, dehydration, dangerous drug smugglers, and ubiquitous scorpions. For more than 60 days Helen struggled to keep moving through this inhospitable terrain despite a severe leg injury. Without sponsors, a support team, or radio contact, hers is a journey of pure discovery and adventure.

Walking the Gobi takes readers on a trip through a little-known landscape and introduces them to the culture of the nomadic people whose ancestors have eked out an existence in the Gobi for thousands of years. Thayer's respect and admiration for the culture of Gobi and her gentle weaving of natural history shine throughout this remarkable story. The author proves that Baby Boomers don't have to take life lying down-their adventures have just begun.



Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0 Score = 5.0

Very well written personal travel story
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
It is rare to have someone write their personal adventure book well enough to really be interesting but Helen Thayer reaches that goal admirably. Walking the Gobi if a fascinating read as she details her and her husband's experiences arranging and then completing this trip. One of the things that makes the book so interesting is her ability to write in a style that draws the reader into the experience as a friend. Likewise, her stories of interaction with nomads and border agents are at times very personal and at other times scary. Through her writing you feel her compassion as well as her fears. Walking the Gobi is a fascinating trip and one not to be missed by those with an inquisitive personality.

The Walk of Wonder and Willpower
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
Excellent! Just an Excellent read. I had read Helen's first book of her solo trek to the Polar North Pole and at that time was in awe of her determination and ability to overcome difficult and dangerous odds. I found this adventure tale even more impressive. Helen starts this trek out with an injured hip and knee from an accident she has just before the trip, but was determined to go ahead with the journey anyway. How this woman walked across the entire length of the Gobi with this injury still amazes me. The pain and suffering she must have endured is beyond unthinkable. I found this story very interesting in so many ways. I learned so much about the ecosystem, the climate, the animals and of the wonderful Mongolian people they encountered along the way. The Mongolian culture was fascinating, the people delightfully friendly and hospitable to both Helen and her husband. The desert trek was grueling but in many ways gorgeous, peaceful, serene and yes ..scary too. If you are a fan of adventure travel narratives, and have read Helen's other books, you will love this and will find you cant put it down as you follow her up, down, and over each sand dune, mile after mile after mile. You will fall in love with the crazy and often persnickety camels that lead their way, you will find yourself extremely thirsty when the two travelers encounter unbearable days of intense heat, you will feel cold when they experience frost in the evenings, and you will at times wonder as you turn each page if they will survive, feeling their fear of death as they walk forward day after day, week after week, feeling every grain of sand invading their pores to the point of suffocation. If you have read Michael Asher's book on his trek across the Sahara, or Charles Blackmore's riveting account of his crossing of the Taklamakan desert of China, then this story is right up your alley.

Accomplishing a Dream and Living a Life
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
Walking the Gobi by Helen Thayer

This book is an enthralling account of the fulfilling of a lifelong dream to cross the Gobi desert.

This book relates the various stories of the adventure, however it was the introduction that compelled me to read the entire book. I had selected this book by accident not sure I wanted to read about the activities of a 63 year old woman and her 74 year old husband. After reading the introduction, I was hooked and needed to read on. I thought how incredible the rest of the book must be if their 1500 mile trek through Death Valley and 4000 mile trek across the Sahara were mentioned in a single paragraph under the title of "Preparations", and then knowing that their accident 9 months before their planned departure, which needed two paragraphs to barely mention their various torn ligaments and muscles, ruptures and bruises, didn't keep keep them from their attempt.

Helen Thayer helps us feel the pain, the thirst, and the emotional highs and lows of their journey not only to complete the trek, but even to just survive it. However I think she is at her best when she is describing the many encounters they have with the Mongolian people, from officials to nomads. My favorite passage is when she describes an interrogation when they are imprisoned as suspected smugglers. She becomes irritated after being threatened with being shot and this leads to her chastising the officials with being disrespectful to their elders and shaming them for their rudeness. This description filled me with wonder and admiration for the sheer spunk and determination of this amazing woman.

Read this book if you want to read about an incredible adventure. Be prepared if this book leads you to dream bigger dreams, and leads you also to question any misconceptions you have about the life you can choose to live in your senior years.

Two great accomplishments- An adventure and the book about it
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
I want to invite Helen Thayer over to dinner. Mainly I want to hear her stories again, and more of them. As soon as I closed Walking the Gobi and set it down on my kitchen table, I felt at the same time winded and awed, but hungry for more.

If you're reading this review, I'm sure you've read the synopsis: two people over age 60 decide to walk across 1500 miles of one of the least-studied deserts in the world. And they do it in the summer.

When Helen Thayer sat down to write this real-life adventure story, she must have known that she had something good. After all, the idea itself is impressive; it tugs at the ear and challenges the imagination. But Thayer does much more in Walking the Gobi than recount a long trek in a string of stories or patronize the reader by giving only summary and analysis of the journey's meaning.

Thayer's descriptions are careful and organized, educated and intuitive. She gives us the gift of recreating each day so we can experience them with her. Each day is numbered and recorded with useful detail- pointing out the unique moments that set it apart from the rest and reinforcing the monotonous heat, wind, and regional dangers that made the journey long and at times overwhelming.

Helen Thayer accomplished a truly great feat when she crossed the Gobi, but what's even better is that she wrote a book about it.

Happy adventuring!

Modern adventurers
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
Modern day adventurers do exist. This is the first thing the reader will realize wehn reading "Walking the Gobi" by Helen Thayer. Ms. Thayer brings the reader with us as she traverses one of the most dangerous places on earth, the Gobi desert. It details a journey she and her husband made across the Gobi desert. From page one, I could not really put the book down. With her we meet Mongolian tribesman, smugglers along the Chinease border, rare Gobi bears, desert scorpions and the occasional Mongolian bureaucrat. Throughout, Ms. Thayer never lets the reader forget how truly amazing and beautiful this part of the world is. Any expedition like this would be a challenge for any healthy individual, but Ms. Thayer manages her journey with an injured leg throghout most of the book. Through sheer mental fortitude Ms. Thayer wills herself to complete her journey across one of the most hostile environments on earth, on step at a time. This is a must read for anyone who enjoys the spirit of adventure.

























Suggestions | Book Store Reviews | Site Map | Book Reviews | Contact Us
© 2008 . All rights reserved. Privacy Statement and Disclaimer
web site design and support by Crystal Solutions