Hobo tourism/Two hundred days in Latin America



Two hundred days in Latin America (ru.Двести дней в Латинской Америке) — a book by the Russian traveler Viktor Pinchuk, who traveled several continents, practicing methods of hobo tourism.

Literary work, created in the travel memoirs genre, describes the author’s longest solo expedition, covering South, Central and North America, including 12 countries: Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Panama, Cuba. During the trip had overnight in the open air, twice visit street acquaintances; the temporary accommodation options were spontaneous and unpredictable, as well as the whole route. Narrative depiction of historical, archaeological and natural objects is supplemented by a color illustration tab, allowing the reader to feel for a while conqueror of overseas latitudes.

General information

 * Year of publication: 2017.
 * Number of pages: 210.
 * Illustrations: the author.
 * Color of illustrations: black and white.
 * Color tab: 20 pages (38 photos).
 * Language of publication: Russian.
 * Genre: journalism, travel essays, road adventures.
 * Topics: country studies.
 * Continents: South America, Central America, North America.
 * Style: artistic publicism.
 * Designed: for a wide range of readers.
 * Where published: Simferopol.
 * Additional data: ISBN 978-5-9909912-0-0.

Quote
''A stack of obsolete banknotes — to distract the robbers, a notebook with translations of the necessary phrases into Spanish, and some information about the first five countries to be visited — that’s all I brought with me. The round-trip ticket bought in advance did not give a chance to retreat, slightly frightening the duration of the expedition. Two hundred days of nomadic life... It’s like falling into an abyss that you can’t see the bottom.''