Ghost Train to the Eastern Star Audiobook By Paul Theroux cover art

Ghost Train to the Eastern Star

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Ghost Train to the Eastern Star

By: Paul Theroux
Narrated by: John McDonough
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About this listen

In Ghost Train to the Eastern Star, Paul Theroux retraces the steps he took thirty years ago in his classic The Great Railway Bazaar. From the Eurostar in London, he once again sets out on a journey to the East, travelling overland through Eastern Europe, India and Asia. Infused with the changes that have shaped the exterior landscape and enriched with developments to his own perceptions and psychology, Ghost Train to the Eastern Star is an absorbing and beautifully written follow-up to The Great Railway Bazaar.©2008 Paul Theroux (P)2009 WF Howes Ltd Travel Writing & Commentary

What listeners say about Ghost Train to the Eastern Star

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Paul Theroux Writes Winners

Theroux is a master writer. if you are an armchair traveler Theroux is the man to travel with.

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Great audio adventure

Where does Ghost Train to the Eastern Star rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

Pretty High. I have a hard time reviewing the books I do not love.

What did you like best about this story?

The main character had so much understanding of people.

Have you listened to any of John McDonough’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

Yes,,,He is my favorite narrator. I have listened to most of what he has done and I loved Grand and Glorious Physician. The other story of Luke in the Bible. McDonaugh just is the characters to me. I also loved his Mitford Series and could not listen to the prequeal because it was not him.

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

I think his time in Viet Nam was amazing.

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3 people found this helpful

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A great follow up to the first

I thoroughly enjoyed The Great Railway Bazaar, and so I decided to take this one on too.
I was afraid that this wouldn't live up, but it really did.
Paul's writing is excellent, and he's still an avid traveler; the fact that he had to change course from the original route made it all the more interesting as he was able to reach new places that he hadn't before.

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    3 out of 5 stars

Engrossing but kind of depressing

Good value in the vast distance and many cultures and nations covered, and the many hours of densely packed details he puts in, so if you want to be taken on a very long and detailed journey from Europe to Japan, it's the book to get. By the end though, the overall feeling was a bit depressive and jaded and the impression of nearly all the societies he visited was on the negative side - most of the population he encountered seemed to be either poor, desperate, drunk, grubby, corrupt or willing to do anything for a buck, which of course may well be true but was a fairly humourless theme. And his focus on talking to and about prostitutes wherever he went was starting to tip the balance from general interest to slightly uncomfortable obsession towards the end. Overall, quite engrossing and informative but not very optimistic about that part of the world - which is a pretty big chunk of the world - and I'd have to say ultimately no "feel good" in fact a bit of a "feel bad" experience.

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8 people found this helpful

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Sequel to perhaps the quintessential train travel story

This wonderful tale of travel sparks imagination and carries the listener along through thousands of miles of landscape, culture and history. It is perhaps best to listen to The Great Railway Bazaar first - then the changes through time (or lack of changes in other areas) can best be understood.

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World from a train/ touching vignettes of humanity

If you could sum up Ghost Train to the Eastern Star in three words, what would they be?

people more alike v, different

What other book might you compare Ghost Train to the Eastern Star to and why?

other theroux non fiction, or paul friedman hot flat and crowded

Which scene was your favorite?

two scenes: when theroux and his friend gave money to impoverished drivers to realize their dreams. Many professional reviewers of this book have called theroux self centered, yet he is charitable to unlikely unknown people in unlikely unknown places

Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?

no, these types of books are to be consumed slowly

Any additional comments?

small details reveal the state of the humanity

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A must read!

I read The Great Railway Bazaar and I listened to Ghost Train... Godfather II is a great movie, but perhaps not as great as its forerunner. Is this the same? Too soon to say. Let me sleep on it. I have too much respect for Paul Theroux to let myself be disappointed. I have no doubt I will listen to this one again. 👍🏼

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DO YOU LIKE IT MILD, HOT OR COLD?

As usual, I loved the book and already plan on listening to it a second time. From mild England and Europe all the way to
hot Sir Linka and north through cold Japan and across frozen Siberia. What could be better than sitting in your easy chair in a comfortable room at home and enjoying a Paul Theroux adventure?

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A more mature Theroux retraces his earlier journey

I am a Theroux fan so was predisposed to like this book anyway. But it was especially good because he was retracing journey he described in The Great Railway Bazaar. The journey had changed and so had the man himself.

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ghost train to the eastern star

I've always considered Paul Theroux my travel mentor since I hitch hiked half the world at 18. For anyone who has dreamed of revisiting the world they visited more then thirty years ago Ghost Train is a delight. I've read all of Theroux's fiction and non-fiction and this is one of his best non-fiction books. I think Theroux has mellowed a bit. He is not the curmudgeon of Dark Star Safari or other recent non-fiction. I love his observations of people he meets, especially his train companions. The portrait of his Burmese guide and his generosity towards him will always be indelibly etched in my mind. I fantasize that in some far away place I might meet him on a train.(although one should be wary of what he might say about the encounter later in a book) I also appreciated the sense that as one gets older travel is more challenging, but with life's experiences we view the world's people with more compassion and the governments more cynically.

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27 people found this helpful