DAILY PHOTO: Northern Laos Farmland

DAILY PHOTO: Wat Pa Phon Phao

DAILY PHOTO: Mekong Sunsets

DAILY PHOTO: Kuang Si Waterfalls

DAILY PHOTO: The Mekong at Luang Prabang

DAILY PHOTO: Wat Choum Khong Sourin Tharame [ວັດຊໍ່ຂົງສຸລະທະທາລາ]

BOOKS: “Southeast Asia: A Very Short Introduction” by James R. Rush

Southeast Asia: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)Southeast Asia: A Very Short Introduction by James R. Rush
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Publisher Site

I’ve been to most of the eleven countries of Southeast Asia, but still my questions are many. This short guide answered some of them. The book takes a largely historical approach, breaking the timeline into periods during which these countries were pre-nation-state kingdoms, then colonies, and then independent countries. While the guide is written by a historian and is organized by governance (i.e. who won the wars,) it does not solely address politics and regimes.

The guide also explores subjects such as religion. This was fortunate for me because a lot of my questions involve this topic. Why is the northern part of the region mostly Buddhist while the southern part is mostly Muslim? Why did Hinduism and other Indian religions (not inclusive of Buddhism, which virtually died out within India) almost entirely give way to other religions in this area, except for spotty exceptions (most notably Bali?) Incidentally, the former question is answered more than the latter, which makes sense as this is small book for a relatively large area, but more importantly for a long history. Southeast Asia has been a strategically and economically important place for centuries.

As a traveler, I found this book well worth reading as a way to gain insight into the region. It doesn’t dive deep into cultural questions (except a bit into religion,) and so there is much more to learn from other books. It does explore who governed these countries and how, and the last chapter brings the question up to date — reflecting on the political and economic changes in the last couple decades. If you’re curious to know more about Southeast Asia, in a way that doesn’t get too deep in the minutiae, this book is worth checking out.


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PROMPT: Travel Plans

Daily writing prompt
What are your future travel plans?

For the balance of this year: Uttarakhand (India) and Laos are the biggies, and then a number of shorter, closer, and more impromptu stops.

DAILY PHOTO: Patuxai, Vientiane

Image

Vang Vieng Limerick

A tourist tubing on the river Nam Song
drifted into a nap that went a little too long.
Six rivers later,
he bumped into a freighter
in open seas, and knew something'd gone wrong.