Getting There: Journeys of an Accidental Adventurer
"Sue Williams
has a lively pen and exotic destinations."
The Australian 16.12.00
"Prolific Sydney journalsit Sue Williams is a girl who gets around -
in the best jet-hopping sense. In a year that has had a dearth of travel
books by women, Williams zooms in with a witty assemblage of her often
perilous journeys, covering territory as disparate as Malawi and Mexico,
India and Uganda
this is easy, breezy reading, perfect for holiday dipping."
The Australian 23.12.00
"Travelling around the world can be a fabulous experience - but it can
also be the stuff of nightmares. In her new book, Sue Williams details
how she ended up in a little tin shed in the middle of Uganda with two
armed and desperate soldiers, pleading for her life."
The Sun Herald,
07.01.01
"Wiliams' hair-raising dalliances include encounters with trigger-happy
Ugandan troops and verbal stoushes with feral British travellers couped
up in a converted dust truck overland from London to South Africa. Williams
travels down on the ground, not above and beyond the local population."
Australian Financial Review, 13.01.02
"Few people choose to travel on a shoestring budget, but maybe they should.
For what doesn't kill you may not make you stronger, but certainly leaves
you smarter, says Sue Williams."
Sunday Age, 07.01.01
"Williams has a good eye for the dramatic qualities of several nightmarish
trips: typical is a truck journey through Africa with a bunch of unsavoury
misfits and an uncaring leader who finally abandons them in Nairobi when
he runs out of money. Rarely the cool observer, invariably coping with
being a lone white female abroad, Williams becomes a guiless guest of
some wealthy Sicilian men, or more bizarrely, is left lying naked in a
sleeping bag on a parth of wasteland in northern Nigera."
Sydney Morning
Herald, 10.03.01
"It serves as a vivid object lesson of the problems found when travelling
in places where the only law appears to be Murphy's - if anything can
go wrong, it will. However, Sue Williams takes it all in good humor with
much practicality and unfailing spirit."
The Age, 20.01.01
"The Australian dollar is pitiful. Experts are tipping another recession.
There are fresh outbreaks of the deadly Ebola virus in parts of Africa
and mad cow disease in Europe. But don't despair says Sue Williams
"
The Courier Mail, 06.01.01
"You had your wallet stolen. Your hotel room was burgled. Your rental
car broke down. Your train crashed on the way there. But don't despair.
With the right atttitude, says Sue Williams, holiday disasters are fodder
to dine out on for years."
Sunday Mail, Brisbane, 07.01.02
"She revels in travelling alone to locations off the beaten track and
meeting the challenges that come with the unknown. Lovers of real-life
adventure will lap this up."
Australian Good Taste, February 2001
"Funny, mad and sometimes scary."
Better Homes and Gardens, February 2001
"
a funny, realistic and inspiring account of travelling the world.
Detailing her journeys over 20 years to every country imaginable, this
book will delight, both adventurers and armchair travellers."
marie claire,
February 2001
"Have a chuckle a page as you travel to the loos of Beijing and the mountops
of Malawi with an accidental traveller."
New Woman, January 2001
"Being a lone woman and surviving was, for Sue, a simple and life-affirming
experience. A sense of humour, cool head and amazing courage just to achieve
her goals, makes this a truly extraordinary read."
Manly Daily, 19.01.01
"
this is a cautionary, but strangely humorous, tale. Read it."
Elle,
March 2001
"An accidental, backpacked adventurer, she highlights her sometimes hellish,
hair-raising and often hilarious experiences around the world - crossing
borders and boundaries between countries, politics, religion and sex in
her wanderlust for life."
Next magazine, June 2001
"The trick is to take along an open mind, a ready sense of humour and
the kind of attitude that turns everything into an adventure to be relished,
instead of a calamity to be suffered at great cost."
The Guardian, UK,
04.07.01
"Such memories are the really rewarding stuff of travel,"
The Independent,
UK, 27.05.01
