· Arriving late in Kyoto Patrick Holland cannot find a room for the night. Homeless and disorientated and in a place where loitering is not encouraged his only solution is to ride the trains. The train journey is the starting point for a book that also describes travels through Vietnam, mountains in the Chinese Himalaya, lost cities of the Silk Road, mist-swathed cemeteries in Japan and the flat plains of Brand: Transit Lounge. Riding the Trains in Japan: Travels in the Sacred and Supermodern Far East (Transit Lounge) is a book of travel essays encompassing Japan, Vietnam and China as well as imaginative and liminal places in-between. Out September Arriving late in Kyoto Patrick Holland cannot find a room for the night. Homeless and disorientated and in a place where loitering is not encouraged his only solution is to ride the trains. The train journey becomes a thread in book that journeys on rivers in Saigon, mountains in the Chinese Himalaya, lost cities of the Silk Road, mist-swathed cemeteries in Japan and the flat plains of.
Arriving late in Kyoto Patrick Holland cannot find a room for the night. Homeless and disorientated and in a place where loitering is not encouraged his only solution is to ride the trains. The train journey is the starting point for a book that also describes travels through Vietnam, mountains in the Chinese Himalaya, lost cities of the Silk. Ride sharing works differently in Japan. Hailo lost the global market-share war to Uber and Lyft, but Hailo won the battle in Japan. Today, Ryo Umezawa details Hailo's Japan market entry strategy and explains how they were able to succeed where Uber has failed. - Author of The Mary Smokes Boys. See more ideas about holland, patrick, author.
Riding the Trains in Japan succeeds in the difficult task of offering the reader a fresh vision of places and histories, of catching the impression of distant voices and also of offering the kind of insight only acquired through travelling. Riding the Trains in Japan: Travels in the Sacred and Supermodern Far East (Transit Lounge) is a book of travel essays encompassing Japan, Vietnam and China as well as imaginative and liminal places in-between. Out September Like this: Like. Riding the Trains in Japan – by Patrick Holland On my first night riding the trains in Japan I felt the logic of journey dissolve; I was travelling nowhere, travelling only in order to be no-place in an a-historical, de-territorialised and perpetual non-place.
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