The daughter of a country parson, Isabella Bird was advised to travel
for her health. Bird's compliance with her doctor's orders took her to
the wildest regions of the American West, Malaysia, Kurdistan, Persia,
the Moroccan desert, and China, among other places. One of nine popular
accounts of her adventures around the world, Unbeaten Tracks in Japan
traces the intrepid Victorian explorer's 1878 excursion into the back
country of the Far East.
Japan had just opened its doors to the West within the past decade, and
Bird traversed regions unknown to many of the island nation's
inhabitants. Traveling more than 1,400 miles by pack horse, rickshaw,
and foot, she followed winding mountain trails and crossed countless
rivers to meet villagers in their remote communities and peasant farmers
in their fields. In poignant, vivid letters to her sister and friends,
Bird describes the vicissitudes of her journey--the discomforts and
difficulties as well as the pleasures and excitement of discovery. 40 of
the author's own sketches and photographs illustrate her captivating
stories.