Travelling for work: Michael Palin's later career

The British were by no means the first travel writers, being beaten by various Greek and Arab scholars, Chinese and Japanese Buddhist monks and Venetian merchants. But they were arguably the first to begin travel for pleasure or even as a challenge! Thus it was apt that Jules Verne chose an Englishman as the hero […]

The British were by no means the first travel writers, being beaten by various Greek and Arab scholars, Chinese and Japanese Buddhist monks and Venetian merchants. But they were arguably the first to begin travel for pleasure or even as a challenge! Thus it was apt that Jules Verne chose an Englishman as the hero of "Around the World in Eighty Days" and following Phileas Fogg's footsteps - and going far ahead - is British actor Michael Palin who fashioned a second successful career as a TV traveller and author.

Of "Monty Python" fame, Palin (1943-) follows a long-standing English literary tradition where 18th century onwards, almost every famous writer - Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Charles Dickens, Robert Louis Stevenson, D.H. Lawrence, Graham Greene, Rebecca West and even Ian Fleming - has a travel book.