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Paperback No Shitting In The Toilet Book

ISBN: 0553817361

ISBN13: 9780553817362

No Shitting In The Toilet

A travel guide with a difference, this title introduces a world where you are more likely to find a cockroach on your pillow than a complimentary mint, where you take your life in your own hands every... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

$5.09
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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Novelty Idea. But tends to overdo it and lose the point.

I first saw this book while waiting for a flight to go travelling again. I had a brief look through it and immediately recognized many of the things that i have experienced from independent travel. The book really is very insightfull and pulls no punches. I applaud him for being honest and speaking the unspeakable. There are plenty of backpackers out there who dont want you to know about the grizzly mundane side of travel. And Peter rumbles their little game. But in being so honest, that's where this book's danger lies. It could bring you to travel, or send you running away from the idea in horror. The humour is often hilarious, but at other times overplays it,or hides behind humour to be bitterly sarcastic about cultures or countries he perhaps did'nt enjoy. At one stage you just start to feel that Peter is adoring how funny he can be, and steps it up for the sake of effect. The book itself is well layed out, and very easy to read. But perhaps lacking in content for your money?, given the price of the book. I read it in half a day and felt i'd payed far too much for it. Later on, you see the original point of the book has run out of steam,and just cops out in favour of "Top 10 " lists. Much of the later parts of the book seem like filler. Everybody likes Top 10 lists, and i think Peter played on that to fill out where he'd trailed off from the point of the book. It's a shame because it does seems quite promising at times, delving with great comic insight into the real hopes and sometimes delusions of budget travellers. It suddenly seems to move away from that subject later on, in favour of being funny with Top 10 lists and his personal memories. That's where it loses it's original edge. They say that you cannot have the pleasure without the pain. Peter describes the pain very well. But he does'nt talk about the pleasure, which is the reward for all those trials. He briefly mentions that at the start. But makes it sound like it's just a kind of maschochism that some travellers thrive on, and that is what keeps him travelling. Rather than you being rewarded with something much deeper for the trials you sometimes face along the way. I think it is very easy to make it sound as though you dont feel anything more higher than the mundane,when you travel. So in that sense, i think Peter tried to portray himself as "Just an ordinary Bloke" a bit too much. He must have felt more than that, to have travelled so much. But he tries to deny it with "down to earth Aussie humour". I've travelled independently on a budget in about 22 countries now. So i can recognize much that goes on in the book. But i also know that Peter must have experienced the romance and deep feelings that travel can bring. That's the other side to travel which is'nt touched upon in this book. Aussie humour always tries to knock romance off it's perch and "Be one of the Lads". Ever macho and down to earth,it fears being seen as possibly affected by deeper emotions of travel. And in th

Even the Stewardess was Laughing...

I picked this up in Heathrow on the way back from a week in southwestern Siberia, a hellhole of a place, and this book was so on target with all the random idiocy and kindness and suspicion and just plan wonderment you stumble into once you leave the main thoroughfares trough London, Tokyo and Sydney and find yourself in way-out-of-the-way places and situations you could never imagine--until that very moment. Read it on the flight from Heathrow and my laughing prompted the stewardess to read a few pages. She had tears in her eyes from laughing so hard.

Never have I read a book this quick

Sarcastic, hilarious but at times practical peice of work. Some of Moore's findings provided warning/tips during my own trips. Others stirred up my curiousity and provided ideas/reasons to visit the places I've never been interested before. Hard to stop once you start reading!

The title says it all

I discovered Peter Moore's books while travelling in Australia earlier this year and have been searching for the rest of the collection since returning to the US. It is fantastic that we can finally get at least one of his titles here in the States. NSITT is a hysterical account of all the horrible things that can happen to you while travelling and that ultimately make your trip worthwhile and memorable. It is an absolute must-read for the travel junkie (and/or for the travel literature junkie). The style is such that you can open the book to any page, read a top ten list, and then rush to your computer to scour the internet for a ticket to anywhere promising uncertain adventure. Or you may be grateful that you are safe at home, dysentary free, and living vacariously via someone's else's fortune (misfortune?). Either way, this book will leave you in stiches.
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