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One Life to Ride : A Motorcycle Journey to the High Himalayas (2nd Edition)
One Life to Ride : A Motorcycle Journey to the High Himalayas (2nd Edition) | Ajit Harisinghani
3 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
Travelling across India on a motorcycle is an intimate way to get acquainted with its myriad cultures, each with their unique beliefs and lifestyle. One Life to Ride is based on a motorcycle journey from Pune to Ladakh and Kargil - a travel story which takes the reader through the hot and dusty plains of India to the higher mountains of the vast Himalayan range many covered in snow even in June. Weaving its way along coastal roads of western India, to Goa, with pig toilets and palm liquor, the tale winds through old and new stories - one from a holy-man cycling from Mumbai to Mecca, another about the meditation technique of Vipassana, yet another of a light-hearted con-game at a scout's camp in Rajasthan - the tale finally takes you to the highest motorable road in the world - the fabled Khardung-La. You'll meet Sufi saints, fake fakirs and homesick soldiers. You'll get stuck in an icy road river and be miraculously rescued. You'll feel the stress an average Kashmiri experiences everyday. You'll see how blind and dangerous religion can be if it is only followed in rituals and illogical beliefs. You'll see how friendly and hospitable everyone is on the roads of India. You'll come away feeling exhilarated, entertained and yes, also exhausted by the physical arduousness of the motorcycle ride. Witty, reflective and honest, One Life to Ride is a daring real life adventure which will keep you turning the pages. Maybe even make you wish you were riding pillion.
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The author, otherwise engulfed by a sedentary lifestyle and a desk job, decides to ride from western India all the way up to the highest motorable road in the world-Khardung La in Ladakh. Experiences along the variety of Indian landscapes are described by the author in very simple humour and words, but the tales anyway keep you gripped and entertained. A chapter or two even makes your eyes moist. A good read if you're a 'traveller', not a tourist.

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ShelfRighteous
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Sudden moments like these make you smile even on the most gloomy day. The author surely does have a good sense of humour!

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ShelfRighteous
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Poems like these make the book much better. Such little words with such great message.