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    Audrey Scott and Daniel Noll serve up a scatter plot of observations from rapidly changing countries on their journey around the world. Tune into Uncornered Market for human stories, engaging travel photography, street food reportage, and insights into personal growth. Read more…

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    • India
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    Buy From Amazon and Support Us The Art of Worldly Wisdom

    The Art of Worldly Wisdom
    Author: Baltasar Gracian
    Beautifully translated, this collection of timeless, universal chunks of insight into human nature easily transcends run-of-the-mill personal and professional management wisdom.

    Shantaram: A Novel

    Shantaram: A Novel
    Author: Gregory David Roberts
    Administering first aid in a Bombay slum, selling fake passports and running guns to the Mujahideen in Afghanistan. Technically a novel, but closely linked to the Author's own experiences. Fantastic read.

    Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, New Edition

    Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, New Edition
    Author: Jared Diamond
    An admirable crack at explaining why the world is the way it is by way of an anthropological macro-history. This book probably comes up the most in conversation as we travel.

Category Archive: Thailand

Robbed Redux: Sticky Fingers at Suvarnabhumi Airport, Part 2

Perhaps you’d like to know what happened after I was robbed at Bangkok Airport security last month. Well, the saga continued with more “investigations” and a mysterious wire transfer. Transparency is not the first word that comes to mind. Continue Reading »

Article Series - Sticky Fingers: Robbed at Bangkok Airport

  1. Robbed! Sticky Fingers at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport
  2. Robbed Redux: Sticky Fingers at Suvarnabhumi Airport, Part 2

Boom Boom Boom (Richard Marx in Our Room)


If I were ever tortured, my captors would break me by playing the morning music from the elementary school next door.

– Dan, after the fifth straight day of waking up at 7:15 AM to enjoy a 45-minute syrupy Thai musical loop resembling “It’s a Small World After All” followed by a live, 15-minute booming drum and bass cadence used to drive a herd of students to their seats. Continue Reading »

Robbed! Sticky Fingers at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport

I was robbed.

It didn’t happen at a grungy guest house, in a crowded local market, or down a dark alleyway at night. It happened in Bangkok’s shiny new Suvarnabhumi Airport at a gate security checkpoint. Worse yet, the thief was a security employee. Continue Reading »

Article Series - Sticky Fingers: Robbed at Bangkok Airport

  1. Robbed! Sticky Fingers at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport
  2. Robbed Redux: Sticky Fingers at Suvarnabhumi Airport, Part 2

New Year’s Eve: A Ritual and a Rat

Early on New Year’s Eve, before the festivities began, we dropped by a local cafŽe in order to perform our annual year-end ritual of reflection and looking forward. Although the specific exercises have evolved, the objective of our ritual remains the same - reflect on the past year and determine themes for the year ahead. Continue Reading »

Article Series - New Year's in Bangkok

  1. New Year's Eve, Bangkok Style
  2. New Year's Eve: A Ritual and a Rat
  3. Top 5 Experiences in 2007

New Year’s Eve, Bangkok Style

This is great! I’m getting kisses from random gender benders.

– Audrey, on our 2008 New Year’s Eve night out in Bangkok.

Last night, we found ourselves welcoming in the New Year in true Bangkok style - with a band, a late night street food nosh, and a swamp of kisses from a horde of Bangkok’s third genders. Continue Reading »

Article Series - New Year's in Bangkok

  1. New Year's Eve, Bangkok Style
  2. New Year's Eve: A Ritual and a Rat
  3. Top 5 Experiences in 2007

Happy 2008: Some Year-End Wisdom from Nine Sacred Places

Temple Lotus Flowers - Chiang Mai By way of a Buddhist festival that we stumbled upon here in Bangkok, we found some fitting wishes and words of wisdom for the new year. In the festival pamphlet, designed very much for locals with a nod to us non-Thai speakers, we discovered a list of wishes and matching offerings for each of the nine participating wats (temples). From this list, we inferred something rather noteworthy. Continue Reading »

Christmas in Krung Thep

Snowman with a KalpakThat’s Christmas in Bangkok to you and me. Krung Thep (City of Angels) is the Thai name for Bangkok, Thailand - the location from which we happen to be writing this post.

We first imagined this post being entitled Wishing You a Very Chinese Christmas, but a quick decision five days ago altered our trajectory and landed us in sunny Bangkok instead. Continue Reading »

Southeast Asia Round Up

As we write this, we are in Tbilisi, Georgia and about to head to Armenia. But just after spending almost five months in Southeast Asia and releasing our site, we find that we’re being asked “what was your favorite ______ in Southeast Asia?”

Here is our attempt to answer those questions, preempt a few others, and provide an overview of our experience. Continue Reading »

Krabi’s Cheap and Divine Eats

We’ve often been asked “What’s the best food you’ve had in mainland Southeast Asia?” If forced to choose, we’d opt for an easy way out and vote Thai food as the king of cuisines in the region. And after eating our way through Bangkok, Chiang Mai in northern Thailand, and Krabi in the south, our vote more specifically goes to Krabi. Continue Reading »

Krabi and the Andaman Beach Scene

Mooring at East Railay Most people come to Krabi to transit to the various beach paradises nearby. We came to Krabi and stayed for two weeks. Though it doesn’t have any particularly amazing sites, the town and its people impressed us as friendly, approachable, and authentic. But as our days in Thailand came to an end, we opted to rejoin the tourist route to explore nearby beaches and take in some excellent diving. Continue Reading »

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