I am happy to announce that my new book, The Vagabond’s Way: 366 Meditations on Wanderlust, Discovery, and the Art of Travel, will be released by Ballantine Books in October of this year, and is available for preorder from your favorite local or online bookstore.

Information about promotions, book-tour events, and a tie-in Deviate podcast season will appear here soon, but for now here’s how the book is described the Random House catalog:


For readers who dream of travel—or long to get back out on the road—The Vagabond’s Way explores and celebrates the life-altering essence of travel. Each day of the year features a one-page meditation on a certain aspect of the journey, anchored by words of wisdom from a variety of thinkers—from Stoic philosopher Seneca the Younger and poet Maya Angelou, to Trappist monk Thomas Merton and Grover from Sesame Street.

Throughout the year, Rolf Potts embraces the ragged-edged, harder-to-quantify aspects of travel that inevitably change travelers’ lives for the better, in unexpected ways. Daily topics include reinventing “bucket lists” and saving money before the journey, improvising itineraries and navigating technology on the road, and keeping the spirit of the journey alive when you get home. The book’s various sections mirror the phases of a trip, including:

 Dreaming and planning the journey: “All life-affecting journeys—and the unexpected wonders they promise—become real the moment you decide they will happen.”

 Embracing the rhythms of the journey: “The most poignant experiences on the road don’t occur in the presence of some grand monument, but in those quiet moments when we recognize beauty in the ordinary.”

 Finding richer travel experiences: “Developing an instinct to venture beyond the obvious on the road allows you to see places not merely as checklists of sights to be visited—but as mysteries to be investigated.”

The Vagabond’s Way is meant to sustain the mindset of a journey, even when one isn’t able to travel. This unique philosophical guide will compel readers to see travel as an ongoing metaphor for life itself, and to bring the lessons of travel back into the context of their home lives.

 [Travel | Philosophy | Personal Growth]