The Monster in the Box

  1. Preparation (Day -4)
  2. Dress Rehearsal (Day -2)
  3. Dusseldorf (Day 1)
  4. Vlotho (Day 4)
  5. Stockholm (Day 5)
  6. Stockholm (Day 6)
  7. Leaving Stockholm (Day 7)
  8. Tallinn (Day 8)
  9. Tallinn (Day 9)
  10. Helsinki (Day 10)
  11. Helsinki (Day 11)
  12. Helsinki (Day 12)
  13. Time Check: Day 12
  14. St. Petersburg (Day 13)
  15. St. Petersburg (Day 14)
  16. St. Petersburg (Day 15)
  17. St. Petersburg (Day 16)
  18. Moscow (Day 17)
  19. Moscow (Day 18)
  20. Moscow (Day 19)
  21. Moscow (Day 20)
  22. Trans-Mongolian (Day 21)
  23. Trans-Mongolian (Day 22)
  24. Trans-Mongolian (Day 23)
  25. Time Check: Day 23
  26. Mongolian Border (Day 24)
  27. Mongolia (Day 25)
  28. Beijing (Day 26)
  29. Beijing (Day 27)
  30. Beijing (Day 28)
  31. Beijing (Day 29)
  32. Beijing (Day 30)
  33. Leaving Beijing (Day 31)
  34. Xi’An (Day 32)
  35. Xi’An (Day 33)
  36. Xi’An (Day 34)
  37. Shanghai (Day 35)
  38. Time Check: Day 35
  39. Shanghai (Day 36)
  40. Shanghai (Day 37)
  41. Leaving Shanghai (Day 38)
  42. At Sea (Day 39)
  43. Himeji (Day 40) – Halfway
  44. Time Check: Day 40
  45. Nara (Day 41)
  46. Nara (Day 42)
  47. Kyoto (Day 44)
  48. Osaka (Day 45)
  49. Hiroshima (Day 46)
  50. Pusan (Day 47)
  51. Vladivostok (Day 49)
  52. Muroran (Day 51)
  53. Time Check: Day 52
  54. Dutch Harbor (Day 56)
  55. Seward (Day 58)
  56. Glacier Bay (Day 60)
  57. Ketchikan (Day 61)
  58. Time Check: Day 61
  59. Vancouver (Day 63)
  60. Empire Builder (Days 64-65)
  61. St. Paul (Day 66)
  62. Chicago (Day 68)
  63. Time Check: Day 68
  64. New York City (Day 70)
  65. New York City (Day 71)
  66. New York City (Day 72)
  67. Queen Elizabeth II (Day 73)
  68. Queen Elizabeth II (Day 75)
  69. Queen Elizabeth II (Day 76)
  70. Success: London (Day 78)
  71. Epilogue: May 27, 2001
  72. The Monster in the Box

We refer to our journals from our Around the World trip as the “monster in the box” – an homage to Spalding Gray and the challenge he had working with a manuscript for a novel.

During our adventure in 2001, we journaled religiously – every day one of us put something to paper. We collected interesting tidbits along the way – brochures, postcards, factoids, news articles – with the intent of capturing the feel of the trip. Where possible, we posted updates during the trip on the great website my cousin set up for us. Reply cards pulled from magazines served as ad hoc notebooks to collect various scribbles. On past trips to Ethiopia, Southeast Asia, and the Balkans., we had managed to pull together some readable travelogues. But a compelling narrative that pulls our Around the World notes into something of interest to another reader remained elusive.

After a year, we had both transcribed our handwritten journals into a digital format. We scanned some of our better pictures to make them internet-friendly. We even booked a weekend in a hotel with the express purpose of finding the story. Any plan we devised was elusive. There were hundreds of pages and no real narrative structure – a mere retelling of us going place to place and doing things. It did not feel like there were any high stakes in the story since (spoiler alert) we made it in under eighty days. We didn’t really stay in any one place long enough for a deep dive travelogue. The closest I could hope for was something like Byron’s The Road to Oxiana.

There was also the feeling that the world had changed. Less than six months after we completed our journey, the attacks of September 11th occurred. The heady era when we traveled – a time of countries excitedly opening to visitors after the lockdown of the Cold War – was now over. It didn’t seem worth writing about a trip that didn’t reflect the current world; a world where the unfamiliar was meant to feel unwelcoming and there was a pervasive fear of the ‘other’.

And so it sat in the box for years. Well over a decade. I reformatted this website multiple times with the hope of finding the perfect media to tell the story. In the meantime, weeks became months which became years.

On the 15th anniversary of the trip in 2016, I took a run at the journals, hoping to turn them into something that could be shared. I cleaned up the language a bit although nothing is perfect.

Editor’s note: On the verge of the 25th anniversary, the website needed a solid infrastructure update. I cleaned up the posts, tried to remove dead links, and looked to make it more readable. That is what you see now.

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *