The India Traveler        by Marjorie Kircher
  • Home
  • About Author
  • Preview of Book
  • Contact
Accompany “The India Traveler” Marjorie Kircher on a unique journey through time and place, as she braves the old Hippie Trail through Afghanistan’s dangers and finds a long-lasting love for India and its people.  This is a book of countless delights and insights.
Edith Mirante, author of The Wind in the Bamboo and Burmese Looking Glass
The India Traveler is available in Portland, OR at New Renaissance Bookstore (NW 23rd Ave) and Mother Foucault's Bookshop (SE Morrison)
and at Prospero's Books, Kansas City, MO, and The Raven Bookstore, Lawrence, KS
or e-stores on Amazon, Powell's or Barnes and Nobles websites.  Available in Europe through Amazon (.co, .uk, .de, .fr, .es, .it) and India (.in)

To order book on Amazon

In January 1973, the author left Kansas, headed to India, following a circuitous route that took her through the museums of Paris, the evil showers at Dachau and donkey trails on the Greek Island of Hydra. In Istanbul, she boarded a rickety purple and orange bus driven by British expats headed for Delhi with their unsuspecting passengers and hidden cargo.  The old bus ferried its riders into unforeseen adventures along parts of the old Silk Road, over dirt roads in eastern Turkey, Iran and the deep gorges of Afghanistan; on through Pakistan to northern India and the Himalayan region of Nepal.  Fascinated by India and its people, Kircher returned to India in later years, staying with families in villages and making lifelong friendships, in an effort to comprehend the elusive Indian culture that survived 350 years of British occupation.
The India Traveler, a memoir, spans three journeys to India in three different decades, 1973, 1983 and 1997.  It reflects the idealism of a young woman coming of age in the turbulent Sixties and Seventies who matured with a curiosity and tolerance of other cultures and religions that would serve us all well in a time of globalization with increasing Indian and Asian influences.

Kircher’s stories of the people she met and lived with on her three trips illuminate a central reason to travel, to make a human connection.

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.