How to Travel the World for Free: One Man, 150 Days, Eleven Countries, No Money!
By (Author) Michael Wigge
Skyhorse Publishing
Skyhorse Publishing
21st November 2013
United States
General
Non Fiction
910.4
Paperback
176
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 13mm
302g
Michael Wigge is on an adventure of a lifetime. The reporter and journalist has traveled to many countries before, but this time he decided to make it more challenging: he would travel twenty-five thousand miles around the world by foot, bus, train, ship, and plane and not spend any of his own money.
The journey was full of challenges: What would he eat Where would he sleep How would he get from place to place Every day, those questions occupied his thoughts, but he always came up with creative solutions. He tried dumpster diving, eating flowers, couch surfing in the homes of strangers, sleeping under the stars, working on a container ship to cross the Atlantic Ocean, offering to pillow fight strangers for a dollar, and after 150 days, he reached his destination. For this, Elite World Records named him the First Person to Travel the World Penniless, and the documentary he filmed about this trip won best feature in the 2011 Accolade Awards.
As much a guide as a travelogue, How to Travel the World for Free will give readers ideas for alternative ways of traveling and will inspire many to go on new adventures. This book is full of surprises, some more pleasant than others. Nevertheless, its a journey you wont want to miss! Traveling can be expensivewhy not do it for free
[Wigge] discusses his amazing, arduous, and life-affirmingexperience.
A strange butfantastic man. --Angelina Jolie
A strange but fantastic man. --Angelina Jolie
Michael Wigge is an author, filmmaker, and journalist. He began his career as an anchor on the German VIVA program London Calling, and the world has been his newsroom and playground ever since. From reporting for MTV from a prison, to entering the Buckingham Palace in England dressed as King Henry VIII, Wigge has always thrown himself into the most unusual situations, including riding a donkey for more than sixty hours in an effort to obtain a Guinness World Record. He has lived with the native Yanomami Indian tribe in the Amazon rainforest and fought sumo wrestlers in Japan. He lives in Berlin, Germany.