From the acclaimed author of Video Nights in Kathmandu comes this
intriguing new book that deciphers the cultural ramifications of
globalization and the rising tide of worldwide displacement.
Beginning in Los Angeles International Airport, where town life--shops,
services, sociability--is available without a town, Pico Iyer takes us
on a tour of the transnational village our world has become. From Hong
Kong, where people actually live in self-contained hotels, to Atlanta's
Olympic Village, which seems to inadvertently commemorate a sort of
corporate universalism, to Japan, where in the midst of alien surfaces
his apartment building is called "The Memphis," Iyer ponders what the
word "home" can possibly mean in a world whose face is blurred by its
cultural fusion and its alarmingly rapid rate of change.