Book Review:
        Magic Bus: On the Hippie Trail From Istanbul to India by Rory MacLean

http://blogcritics.org/archives/2009/03/29/133649.php

Written by Tim Gebhart
Published March 29, 2009

Whether it's because we like to commemorate anniversaries of events 
or a perception, right or wrong, that it was a time of promise, we 
have a seemingly never-ending fascination with the 1960s. With Magic 
Bus: On the Hippie Trail From Istanbul to India, Rory MacLean seeks 
to explore a somewhat unique element of '60s culture. To a certain 
extent, though, Magic Bus serves almost as a metaphor for the era.

The book seeks to retrace the tracks of the hippie travelers who 
headed east to find enlightenment. Thus, MacLean travels from Turkey 
through Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India to "the End of the 
Road," Nepal. The hippies headed to Kathmandu and India in search of 
enlightenment (and dope). Even if they found dope, the vast majority 
didn't find self-realization and returned to become what younger 
generations now call "the worst generation." And while the hippie 
trail was viewed then to be a source for Eastern wisdom and a 
different level of consciousness, the current state of the countries 
MacLean visits don't necessarily reflect that the '60s were of great benefit.

The trail spawned a tourism industry in Turkey, where now even 
fishing villages are "skimmed by a sheen of tourism." Iran's 
revolution brought an end to it being an accessible transit point. 
Afghanistan has become a country where, at the gate of a refuge camp 
just outside the historic city of Herat, a "cobbler sells single 
shoes for one-legged mine victims." The Kabul Museum in Pakistan, 
once home to the finest collection of antiquities in Central Asia, 
has a sign outside the main door asking, "Is your weapon unloaded?". 
India's focus seems to be on making money, not Krishna consciousness. 
Nepal is both an "apartheid state of spectacular inequality" and one 
which a few decades of tourism turned "into a vulnerable Himalayan theme park."

Granted, none of this can be laid exclusively or squarely at the feet 
of the hippie travelers. But it is also proof that regardless of how 
anyone views the 1960s, you can't go back. Despite MacLean's keen eye 
for detail, that seems a fundamental problem with his goal. Try as he 
might, he doesn't' really illuminate the driving force behind or the 
experiences of these travelers. Instead, it is as if MacLean, born in 
1964, is trying to grab hold of a experience that he holds in awe but 
slightly preceded him. This is reflected in the fact that he calls 
these journeyers of the 1960s "the Intrepids," evidently because they 
were intrepid travelers. Granted, they may have been trailblazers to 
some extent but if they were world-changing, it is difficult to see 
it today. And while those who lived through the time recall it with 
fondness and pleasure, one of the most honest statements may be that 
of a now well-to-do Indian bookseller, who tells MacLean, "I lived 
for the moment ­ so forgive me if I don't remember much else."

All things considered, Magic Bus is perhaps stronger as a travel book 
than cultural history. That is not surprising given that MacLean is a 
well-recognized travel writer. His observations of both Afghanistan 
and Pakistan, for example, stand out in comparison to his discussions 
with those who remember the hippie trail as it was. Additionally, he 
explores how the hippie trail led to the birth of the modern travel 
guide. The first book from the company now know as Lonely Planet was 
about an overland journey in the early 1970s through the same 
countries and it first focused on guidebooks for those following the 
hippie trail. At the same time, MacLean is not hesitant to examine 
how the development of this industry changed the types of travelers 
on the road and the impact of those changes.

MacLean's search for enlightenment about the hippie trail may 
reinforce one universal truth ­ you can't recapture the past. Or, to 
paraphrase a Joan Baez song, the sixties are over so set them free.

.


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