For some of us travel is a vice for anonymity and escape to punctuate breakups, career changes, midlife crises and retirement. For other overland journeys reveal deeper impulses of personal transformation – with people acquainting themselves with Eastern practises and mystical traditions of original peoples to find answers to happiness and harmony and bear light onto the ultimate mystery and sufferance of it all. Once again offering his distinctly ruminative and personal account of the wanderlust filled world of international budget backpacking, Beat Zen and the Art of Dave consolidates Mc Namara’s unique voice in the stereotypic genre of travel writing by.
Beat Zen and the Art of Dave is the playful and referentially titled follow up to Mc Namara’s first travel memoir, Loves, Kerbsides and Goodbyes. As the title suggests, Beat Zen and the Art of Dave draws upon a privileged insight spanning a decade and a half to expound on the shifting ideals and motivations behind the ever expanding popularity of shoestring travelling. The book examines Mc Namara’s incurable desire for travel by winding past recollections dating back to his inaugural backpacking adventure in 1998, with trips as recent as last year to reveal deeper impulses of anonymity, escape, independence and personal transformation. By comparing the attitudes and impulses of the aging Lonely Planet generation to the new i Backpackers, he exposes the darker side of wanderlust through the delusions, fallacies and inherent detachment ignored by travellers, but which accompany any obsession. Mc Namara credits the ancient connection between travel and spirituality and lays a foundation of various mystical and unorthodox philosophies to address the current climate of spiritual curiosity in our digital world. As more and more people return to Eastern practises and mystical traditions of original peoples to find answers to happiness and harmony Beat Zen and the Art of Dave discusses the conundrum of travellers seeking enlightenment in the less familiar when mobile technology keeps us tethered to all that we left behind.
Finally, Mc Namara returns to his signature preoccupation with goodbyes to confront the sacrifices of his own itinerant lifestyle, and the uncertain end to his first committed relationship as his girlfriend looks to embark on her own travels upon graduating university. At its essence Beat Zen and the Art of Dave is mediation on the modern vagrant and wayfaring lifestyle. And with broad appeal and candour it elucidates the perils and rewards of self exploration and discovery often ignored in everyday life, but which find a home in the dislocation of time, distance and freedom of the open road.
Table of Content
Table of Contents
About Author
1-The Leaving Phenomenon
2-Backpacking Baptism of Fire
3-Escaping the Hostel Ka’Beh
4-Los Amigos Theatre of Transformation
5-Climax of Emptiness
6-Darwin Syndrome
7-Operation El Mirador
8-Waterlust
9-Frivolity of Detachment
10-Philly and Rocky
11-Finding Ferris in Gotham City
12-Conformity of Charity
13-The Reality of Arriving
14-Waterfalls and Arches
15-The Oneness of Travel
16-The Vegan Enigma
17-Searching For the Rabbit in the Moon
About the author
As an author, artist, pilgrim and wayfarer, David Mc Namara has been spinning tales of adventure and yarns of fiction for more than 15 years. Originally from Perth on the remote west coast of Australia, David’s enchantment with movement was sown at an early age. But a European gap year in 1998 hooked David on backpacking, and independent travel soon turned into a Beat Zen way of life. The more places David visited, the more eager he grew for longer adventures and more remote destinations – trekking through the Andes, the Alps, the Himalayas and the Amazon; traversing the Mosquito Coast, the Trans-Siberian, the Silk Road and edges of Mesopotamia; sailing on Egyptian feluccas and Panamanian catamarans; crossing glaciers in Pakistan and deserts in Africa; visiting ancient archaeological sites around the world including Ciudad Perdida and El Mirador, surviving South East Asia hedonism, highway bandits and police corruption; hitchhiking across Mongolia, Tibet and Tajikistan; and road tripping around North America.
Along the way David came to realise that journeying across vast continents via river, road, trails, rail and sea is not that different from overlanding it through life. With fortitude and passion, David’s innumerable budget backpacking odysseys across six continents produced its own inevitability in 2011 with the release of his first book, ‘Loves, Kerbsides and Goodbyes’. David has since completed his eagerly awaited second travel memoir titled ‘Beat Zen and the Art of Dave’ in which he’s continually discovering new places and cultures, and meeting new and fascinating people. David continues to live a life on the open road, gathering material for a third travel book while working on two books of fiction. When he’s not seeking out an untold story, he’s heading towards an unknown destination over the horizon – enjoying being lost in the spaces between places.