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Wide-Open World

How Volunteering Around the Globe Changed One Family's Lives Forever

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
His twenty-year marriage was floundering. His two teenage kids were lost in cyberspace most of the time. He felt disconnected from his work, his family, his life. Which is when he had an idea: Let's volunteer our way around the world. John Marshall had read about the growth of voluntourism, and frankly, it was the only kind of extended trip he could afford. He'd heard that some peoples' lives were changed by a week of overseas service-what might half a year accomplish for his family? His wife Traca was all in favor of it; his kids, especially his 14-year-old daughter, were strongly opposed. WIDE-OPEN WORLD is the totally engaging, bluntly honest story of the Marshall family's life-changing adventure: six months of world travel, volunteering their way from Costa Rica to New Zealand to East Asia, how it went and what it led to. As Marshall discovered, he and his family did not change the world; the world changed them.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      John Marshall and his wife leave their jobs and house in Maine and, with their two teenagers, take six months to travel and volunteer around the world. Marshall's performance is accessible and self-effacing. The family's life-changing experience has a rough start. The first stop is a wildlife sanctuary in Costa Rica where Marshall gets bitten by monkeys so often that he refuses to go outside. But things improve. Marshall's rendition of the Thai children running around screaming "foreigner" in Thai because they've never seen one before is hysterical. Most heartwarming is Marshall's experience in an Indian orphanage, where the children call him "uncle" and put down stones so he never needs to walk in the mud. The singsong Indian accent the author adopts for those children is both adorable and renders his love for them. A.B. © AudioFile 2015, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 8, 2014
      In this memoir and travelogue, Marshall chronicles his family’s intense half-year international voluntourism trip. Reflecting on his teen son’s shy nature, his teen daughter’s self-absorption, and his slow separation from his wife, he convinces himself that a year of service could bring them all back together. Logistics and finances intervene to cut the trip down to six months, but what a six months! As they work at an animal sanctuary in Costa Rica, on organic farms in New Zealand, and with orphans in India, each new location combines beautiful scenery with a dose of sentiment, a good deal of humor, and some heartfelt consideration of the human condition. Marshall’s experience gives rise to phrases like “the thing about your second set of monkey bites is...” and “each day began at 4:15 a.m. with roosters.” His philosophy may not fit everyone and the ending is bittersweet, but this is an enticing call to service. Agent: Jill Grinberg, Jill Grinberg Literary Management.

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  • English

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