The Tranquilo Traveler
The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.
Pre-Order New Edition of My Book, Moon Belize, Now!
Time to start stokin’ up the buzz for the seventh edition of Moon Belize! It’s not available till September, but why wait? Pre-order your copy today at Amazon.com or Barnes & Noble: “Former Belize resident Joshua Berman knows the best way to experience Belize, from hiking the waterfall at Lubaantun and riding horseback to El Pilar to diving reefs at dawn. Berman includes unique trip ideas like Surf and Turf and Diving in Belize. Packed with information on dining, transportation, and accommodations, Moon Belize has lots of options for a range of travel budgets. Moon Belize gives travelers the tools they need to create a more personal and memorable experience. With expert writers, first-rate strategic advice, and an essential dose of humor, Moon guidebooks are the cure for the common trip.” (more…)
New Travel Blog from Transitions Abroad
Go ahead and bookmark Transitions Abroad’s new venture: The Wide World Café, which “will feature travel news and commentary about current events affecting travelers, and provide insights and advice for travelers by our regular contributor Volker Poelzl.” They will also feature various destinations, books, music, and other travel-related tidbits. Transitions Abroad has been one of my favorite resources for years and I expect to check their new site regularly.
Geeky comic sums up life as a travel writer
Check out this cartoon from xkcd.com, a “webcomic of romance,
sarcasm, math, and language.” It speaks volumes.
Portrait of my Workspace

I took this photo to serve as the “before shot” in a time-lapse movie of me cleaning my room. I didn’t think to post it until I saw an image of Al Gore’s cluttered workspace and thought, why not pay tribute to my own mess? The hanging pictures are Grandpa Dick and the Dalai Lama. I got the desk for fifty bucks on craigslist, the all-in-one printer at Staple’s, and the tired old G4 in Chiang Mai (remember that happy ending?). A quiver of my books, cold cup of that morning’s coffee, and Vonnegut quote taped to the wall complete the scene. Temple of the soul, word factory, or pile of wires and crap? You make the call.
Nicaragua murder story featured in Outside
“The Boomtown, the Gringo, the Girl, and Her Murder,” by Tony D’Souza, is the main story in the current issue of Outside (June 2007): “When a local beauty turned up dead in Nicaragua’s San Juan del Sur, the dream of paradise became a nightmare for one expat American surfer. He got 30 years and, predictably, a media melee ensued. But TONY D’SOUZA was on the scene from day one. This is the story you haven’t heard.”
If you haven’t bought the magazine yet, check out this teaser of the article, this beautiful gallery of Nica images (by photographer Jason Florio), and this podcast interview with the author. (more…)
Our Honeymoon in National Geographic Traveler “Sudden Journeys” Article
A short piece I wrote about my recent extended honeymoon is included in this National Geographic Traveler feature article entitled “Sudden Journeys: Twenty-five tales of last-minute travel prove that the least-planned trips can provide our longest-lasting memories.” My piece, “Not Your Typical Honeymoon,” is near the bottom of the page, among an incredible assortment of writers, including such heavyweights as Pico Iyer, Mark Jenkins, Rolf Potts, and Arthur Golden. This is the first time I’ve been published in NatGeo and though my story was pulled from the print edition at the last minute, I’m happy they found a place for it. The piece is a broad brush stroke about the 16-month round-the-world trip my wife and I took last year. I’m writing a narrative book about the experience as well. It will draw heavily from these original blog postings.
Luxury Hotels in Belize
I contributed the Belize section to a new website called Luxury Latin America. It includes descriptions of a few of Belize’s more fabulous accommodations. Ah, the irony of travel writing: one day I’m researching a $10-a-night backpacker dive (normally, the only place I can afford), the next a $1,000-a-night extravagance. But no matter the rates, hotels in Belize are unique when compared to other countries in the region. Why? For one thing, they are small (70 percent of the country’s 557 licensed hotels have ten rooms or less). International hotel chains are virtually nonexistent, mainly because of the relatively small market and labor pool, not to mention Belize’s longtime reputation as a forgotten “backwater.” That reputation is changing quickly, yet even as tourism forges ahead, most Belize hotels are still independently owned and managed, resulting in many properties being a truly creative expression of their owners’ dreams and visions. The results are impressive. [Link]
Solas Travel Writing Awards: TT Gets an Honorable Mention
The First Annual Solas Awards Winners were announced today and though I didn’t take home any cash, my story, “Sara Kunda: A Homecoming in the Gambia,” received a Silver Certificate in the Culture and Ideas category. The piece was based on several Tranquilo Traveler blog entries spawned by our monumental trip up the Gambia River, in search of my wife’s old Peace Corps village. The Grand Prize winning stories (from Bolivia and Spain) are published here at Best Travel Writing.
Volunteering in Belize: New Transitions Abroad Article
Here’s a new article I wrote for TransitionsAbroad.com. (If you ‘ve never heard of this website, it’s basically the mother ship portal to all things work/study/volunteer abroad, founded in 1977 by Hampshire College Professor Dr. Clay Hubbs, and available in bookstores as a print magazine.) My article is a purely practical piece, a listing of unique travel opportunities I found while traveling in Belize last November. These kinds of experiences — combining travel with study, work, and volunteering abroad — is one of the fastest growing segments of the global tourism industry, especially in Belize, a close, safe, small English-speaking country with plenty of alternative travel programs to feed the demand.
The News from San Juan del Sur
In last Friday’s article, “Nicaragua rising: War-torn image gets a tourist makeover,” USA TODAY gives us yet another travel piece from Nicaragua’s happenin’ southwest corner. The reporter, Laura Bly, asked Randy and me to help plan her research trip; she carried both of our books during her trip and recommends our site, GoToNicaragua.com, in the article. Bly’s article covers all the required topics, scenes, and imagery for a San Juan del Sur–based Nica travel piece, but does not mention the big Valentine’s Day murder trial of an American there.
Pages
BY JOSHUA BERMAN
Categories
- 0. Volunteering Abroad
- 1. Round-the-World Honeymoon
- Belize
- Colorado
- El Salvador
- Fun with Maps
- Guatemala
- Mexico
- Nicaragua
- Outward Bound Wilderness
- Spanish Language Schools
- Teaching
- Travel
- Travel Quotes
- Travel Writing: Guidebooks, News, & Resources
Travel links
- Cheap Air Tickets
- Travel Insurance
- Travel Blogs
- Globetrekker Videos
- London Hostels
- Soccer Blog
- Adventure Travel
- Eurail Passes
- Airport Parking
- Airfare Search Engine
My Links
- Travel Bloggage
- Eric Gauger
- The Practical Nomad
- Adam Katz
- Susana & Brian
- David Stanley
- Erik Olsen
- Gadling
- Jeff Greenwald
- The Written Road
- Jon Rawlinson
- Where Am I Wearing?
- Lee & Sachi
- Peace Corps Writers
- Perceptive Travel
- Planeta.com
- Pology
- The Randymon
- www.ephemerratic.com
- Vagablogging
- Thirteen Months
- Cheapeast Destinations
- Travel Writing
- Travelers' Tales
- World Hum
- Xeni
- Ze Frank: Mind Trips
- Dancin' Matt
- Travel TV Lounge
- Our Man in Granada
- Swiss Family Travelers
- Travel Babel
- Kelly Amabile
- Brave New Traveler
- Intelligent Travel
- Wide World Café
- Wayne Bernhardson: The Southern Cone
- Yoga Sutay
- Europe Blog
- Journey Etc.

