10 Book Recommendations For All Of Your Travel Needs

What to pack for planes, trains, AND automobiles.
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Books make the best travel companions; they're reliable, portable, and won't get grumpy when things don't go according to plan (they are inanimate objects!). Pairing a story with your destination is as reliable method as any, but we're also keen on picking books based on a trip's mood and mode of travel. The spontaneity of a road trip; the mystical feeling inspired by flying; the old-school charm of riding a train. Check out our transportation-based book recommendations below.

Airplane reads

If you’re flying to your destination, transport yourself to faraway fictional lands -- or hop into a story about those crazy-mystical air vessels we so often take for granted.

The Diver’s Clothes Lie Empty by Vendela Vida

Vida’s novel about travel and identity might be an artful meditation on Murphy’s Law: pretty much everything that can go wrong, does. As soon as she arrives in her destination -- Casablanca, Morocco -- the narrator loses all of her possessions. The ensuing plot grows more and more absurd, as she finds herself on the set of a movie, and backstage at a Patti Smith concert, all the while trying to reclaim who she thought she was -- not to mention her passport. But the story is also full of funny reflections on the learning curve that comes with adjusting to a new place.

Circling the Sun by Paula McLain

McClain’s historical novel centers on a woman whose unabashed pursuit of her own desires makes her a trailblazing anomaly for her time. The book is set in the '20s, but its protagonist, Beryl Markham, is no flapper -- rather, she’s an aviator, and her flights have brought her acclaim. Of European descent but raised in Kenya, Beryl struggles with her attempts to apply her navigation skills to the traverses of her own emotional life, getting caught up in a tumultuous love triangle.

Nobody Is Ever Missing by Catherine Lacey

Like Vida’s subtle and at times dark story of self-discovery, Lacey’s book begins with an emotionally unfulfilled woman embarking suddenly on a trip, surprising those around her by nearly disappearing. The narrator of Missing is comfortably married, but that comfort is so maligned with how she feels about her life that she has no other choice to escape. Elyria hops on a plane to New Zealand, and explores the country’s most isolated corners, hitchhiking haphazardly along the way.

Train reads

If you’re hopping on a train, get in the mood with some steampunk literature -- or a subway-centric story.

The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins

The scary elements of Hawkins’ super-bestselling thriller are in no way related to the functionality of the titular train (luckily for those hoping to read it while in transit). Instead, it’s a suspenseful read about narrator Rachel, who's been coping with a recent split as best as she can. Drowsy from nights of liquid comfort, she takes the train each morning, wizzing by her ex’s house. When she begins noticing details about it that are out of the ordinary, she questions whether her senses are tricking her. 

The Watchmaker of Filigree Street by Natasha Pulley

For a less literal take on train-appropriate fiction, Pulley’s novel has the same air of vintage-inspired adventure as a steam engine fueled trip. Thaniel Steepleton (who, you may be surprised to know, is NOT a Dickensian comic relief character) is on the hunt for the watchmaker who made a gadget that saved his life. He's joined by a soothsayer-like accomplice, and the two set off on an adventure any Sherlock Holmes fan would be happy to tag along with.

A Cure for Suicide by Jesse Ball

The trains in Ball’s surreal new book transport its sleeping residents from town to mysterious town, as part of a peculiar social project called the Process of the Villages. In each new town, a weary citizen relearns how to speak, how to socialize, how to go on dates, how to get jobs and how to partake in other basic tasks. The mood of the setup is eerie -- what exactly caused this blank-slate state? As Ball reveals the mystery at the novel’s core, he also reflects on the value of memories -- even tragic ones.

The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P. by Adelle Waldman

A proud if pretentious Brooklynite, Nathaniel P. can often be found flirting with women at his local coffee shop and hopping on the subway to hang out with various romantic pursuits. It’s a fun read for anyone who enjoys indulging in cynicism, but it may make the jaded reader feel that his or her suspicions about the futile nature of dating are completely justified. That said, it’ll certainly make you laugh.

Road trip reads

If you’re road trippin’ it, we recommend packing one of these fictional cross-country treks. Just don’t read and drive!

Paper Towns by John Green

The movie just came out, but as the (typically true) adage goes: the book was way better. It’s much more than a fun teen story -- although it’s that, too. Narrator Quentin “Q” Jacobson has the night of his life with his dream girl but is dismayed to find that she’s disappeared the next day. His search for her isn’t just a boy-chases-girl lesson in perseverance. The more Q learns about Margo -- cued in by clues she left behind for him -- the more he realizes that she’s a deeply complex and flawed individual belied by a manic pixie persona.

Find Me by Laura van den Berg

Short story master van den Berg’s first novel begins in a claustrophobic setting. After a bizarre memory-loss disease spreads across the world in a flash, those immune are quarantined in a hospital. Narrator Joy is among them -- its possible that the traumas she endured as a child are responsible for warding off the strange killer -- and she soon learns that the hospital is no safer than the outside world. Joined by a childhood comrade, she hops on a bus in search of her lost mother, playing memory games along the way.

Lucky Us by Amy Bloom

A historical work of fiction set on the home front during World War II, Amy Bloom's novel follows narrator Eva and her sister -- both disgruntled runaways -- on a trek from Hollywood's flashy scene to a quiet neighborhood in Brooklyn. It's not quite a rags-to-riches story, but a more nuanced look at what chasing the American dream can really involve. The pair's cobbled-together family has to lie their way to relative economic comforts, and in doing so form lifelong bonds.  

Also on HuffPost:

9 Books With Surprising Endings
'Big Little Lies' by Liane Moriarty(01 of09)
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"Deservedly popular Moriarty invigorates the tired social-issue formula of women's fiction through wit, good humor, sharp insight into human nature and addictive storytelling."After last year's best-selling The Husband's Secret, Australian Moriarty brings the edginess of her less-known The Hypnotist's Love Story (2012) to bear in this darkly comic mystery surrounding a disastrous parents' night at an elementary school fundraiser.Read full book review.
'The Secret Place' by Tana French(02 of09)
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"Everyone is this meticulously crafted novel might be playing—or being played by—everyone else."A hint of the supernatural spices the latest from a mystery master as two detectives try to probe the secrets teenage girls keep—and the lies they tell—after murder at a posh boarding school.Read full book review.
'Blood Aces: The Wild Ride Of Benny Binion, The Texas Gangster Who Created Vegas Poker' by Doug J. Swanson(03 of09)
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"An entertaining and provocative portrait of a man whose dichotomies were largely a product of the violent times in which he thrived."The big life and fast times of one of the most charismatic and dangerous good ol' boys in America's criminal history.Read full book review.
'Standing In Another Man's Grave' by Ian Rankin(04 of09)
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"Rankin deserves every award he's been given: an Edgar, a Gold Dagger, a Diamond Dagger. Surely there's another one waiting for Rebus' thrilling return to the fold."Five years after his last recorded case (Exit Music, 2008), John Rebus returns, and welcome.Read full book review.
'Darkness, Darkness' by John Harvey(05 of09)
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"As Resnick revisits one of Britain's most painful events, he wrestles mightily with his own grief over the death of his girlfriend and struggles with the inevitability of his finite time as a detective."In his last case, former DI Charlie Resnick revisits a mystery from his own past in Harvey's moving and moody 12th series installment.Read full book review.
'A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby And The Great Betrayal' by Ben Macintyre(06 of09)
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"Gripping and as well-crafted as an episode of Smiley's People, full of cynical inevitability, secrets, lashings of whiskey and corpses."A tale of espionage, alcoholism, bad manners and the chivalrous code of spies—the real world of James Bond, that is, as played out by clerks and not superheroes.Read full book review.
'Perfidia' by James Ellroy(07 of09)
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"Ellroy is not only back in form—he's raised the stakes."Though it pivots on the Pearl Harbor attack, this worm's-eye view from thoroughly corrupt Los Angeles is a war novel like no other.Read full book review.
'The Paying Guests' by Sarah Waters(08 of09)
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"Waters keeps getting better, if that's even possible after the sheer perfection of her earlier novels."An exquisitely tuned exploration of class in post-Edwardian Britain—with really hot sex.Read full book review.
'Gods And Beasts' by Denise Mina(09 of09)
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"As Gallagher faces the ruin of his career, readers will wonder how Alex (The End of the Wasp Season, 2011, etc.) can possibly tie these cases together. Though the final surprise doesn't have the snap of logical inevitability, it's depressingly realistic."Who would shoot an inoffensive retiree in the middle of an otherwise routine robbery?Read full book review.

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