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The Devil's Road to Kathmandu
 
 

The Devil's Road to Kathmandu [Kindle Edition]

Tom Vater
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

Print List Price: £8.92
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Product Description

Product Description

‘The Devil’s Road To Kathmandu’ by Tom Vater is a tense, fast paced and kaleidoscopic pulp thriller, following the lives of two generations of drifters who become embroiled in a saga of sex, drugs and murder on the road between London and the Indian subcontinent.

In 1976, four friends, Dan, Fred, Tim and Thierry, drive a bus along the hippie trail from London to Kathmandu. En Route in Pakistan, a drug deal goes badly wrong, yet the boys escape with their lives and the narcotics. Thousands of kilometers, numerous acid trips, accidents, nightclubs and a pair of beautiful Siamese twins later, as they finally reach the counter-culture capital of the world, Kathmandu, Fred disappears with the drug money.

A quarter century later, after receiving mysterious emails inviting them to pick up their share of the money, Dan, Tim and Thierry are back in Kathmandu. The Nepalese capital is not the blissful mountain backwater they remember. Soon a trail of kidnapping and murder leads across the Roof of the World. With the help of Dan’s backpacking son, a tattooed lady and a Buddhist angel, the ageing hippies try to solve a 25-year old mystery that leads them amongst Himalayan peaks for a dramatic showdown with their past.

Praise for Tom Vater's The Devil's Road to Kathmandu

The Bangkok Post:
The Devil's Road to Kathmandu is a better backpacker's book than The Beach.

The Nepali Times:
The Devil’s Road, a novel by Tom Vater, is a great read. It’s the story of three 1970s hippies driving a rickety bus overland from Europe through Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India to Kathmandu. Long on naiveté, short on funds, they get involved with a couple of young women, a mysterious Frenchman, a set of Siamese twins who work as cabaret singers, some holy men, and drugs. Big time drugs. The deal they strike in Pakistan, they think, is their opportunity to pay for the entire trip. But get in trouble when it all goes terribly wrong in Kathmandu and the money disappears.
Twenty-five years later the hippies return to Nepal, back on the trail of the lost drug money. One is travelling with his son. I won’t tell you what happens next, nor the story’s climax, only that it’s a riveting read all the way from Hanuman Dhoka to Khumbu.

Lifestyle +Travel:
Three friends, two cities, one bus and a seemingly endless supply of narcotics: a typical GAP year? Maybe not. It’s 1976, and the lads’ road to Kathmandu – through pre-revolution Iran and feudal Pakistan – is paved with self-destructive yet philosophical tendencies; the likes of which have, in the context of today’s North Face-backpacker hegemony, gone the way of the Dodo. Vater sets scenes on a razor edge, catastrophe, oblivion and unbridled passion waiting for these volatile characters to lose their balance - a common fate when you’re stoned out of your tree. Multiple narratives and parallel plots give this book breadth and depth – quite a mind trip, actually, and a rather addictive read.

Untamed Travel:
A harrowing, darkly humorous story of three hippie friends who slum their way from London to Kathamandu in 1976 where they screw up a drug deal, setting in motion consequences that force them to return twenty-five years later. In this first novel, itinerant feature journalist Tom Vater brings to the realm of fiction his trademark vision of a world where deserving has little to do with what you get. A gripping and clever tale of sex, crime, love, narcotics and greed, though not necessarily in that order.

About the Author

Tom Vater has written non-fiction and fiction books, travel guides, documentary screenplays, and countless feature articles investigating cultural and political trends and oddities in Asia. His stories have appeared in publications such as The Asia Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, The Times, Marie Claire, Penthouse and The Daily Telegraph. He co-wrote The Most Secret Place on Earth, a feature documentary on the CIA’s secret war in Laos, which has been broadcast in 25 countries. His bestselling book Sacred Skin (www.sacredskinthailand.com), the first English language title on Thailand’s sacred tattoos, has received more than 30 reviews. Tom’s work has led him across the Himalayas, given him the opportunity to dive with hundreds of sharks in the Philippines, and to witness the Maha Khumb Mela, the largest gathering of people in the world. On assignments, he has joined sea gypsies and nomads, pilgrims, sex workers, serial killers, rebels and soldiers, politicians and secret agents, artists, pirates, hippies, gangsters, police men and prophets. Some of them have become close friends.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 425 KB
  • Print Length: 324 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 9881655676
  • Publisher: Crime Wave Press (22 Jun 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B008E71INO
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #314,021 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Freak Scene 19 Feb 2013
Format:Paperback
I bought this title because I traveled along the hippie trail myself in 1974. I think. Anyhow, The Devil's Road is a pretty good re-imagination of the days when some of us where really free. The music, the sex, the drugs, the miles on the road in unsavory vehicles - it's all there. Tom Vater obviously knows the era and the geography. At the heart of this book lies a story about friendship and how in those hazy days of fast deals and sloppy border crossings, these could fall apart quickly, with tragic consequences. A great thriller from a time long gone, nicely put into focus by the latter scenes playing out in more recent, and more conservative times. Read The Devil's Road to Kathmandu and freak out! One more time.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Devil's Road to Kathmandu 9 July 2012
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I was saving this title for holiday reading but picked it up late one night and pretty much read it straight through. I thoroughly enjoyed the story, it is a page turner (or clicker) and has good pace.
It cleverly juxtaposes an overland trip to the 'East' in the mid 70's with a trip in 2000. The story line is threaded nicely between both eras with sympathetic and believable characters.
You don't need to have been there to enjoy this but if you were, it will take you right back.
A good read and I'll probably re-read it at some point.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Devil's Road to Kthmandu 20 Feb 2013
By Padem
Format:Paperback
Four friends, one bus, CAN and The Stones on the speakers, joints lighting up like there's no tomorrow. It must be the 1970s!!! The Devil's Road to Kathmandu is a road movie in book form which follows a bunch of drug addled desperados from London to Kathmandu along the infamous hippie trail through Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. Of course things go wrong and only find a somewhat corny if dramatic conclusion 25 years later in Nepal. The writing is lean and assured and the cultural details are countless and read like an immersion course into Asia's byways. A gem of a book which takes us into a world that is long lost to revolutions, geopolitics and terrorism. Hit the road, Jack!
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