'It was an empty landscape now with huge horizons in every direction, a compressed, steam-rollered desert where man had no place. We lacked the skills to carry out even the most basic fixes. If the van stopped working we were stuck. No one knew where we were and our last mobile signal had been 150 miles ago.'
Fifty-something and tired of arguing with John Humphrys over the day’s headlines, BBC journalists Geoff and David found themselves eagerly volunteering for redundancy. But rather than easing into retirement with the odd round of golf, they decided to buy a van and drive off to Mongolia. Well, it seemed like a good idea at the time…
In an epic journey through Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan, Siberia and across the Gobi Desert, they discover more about each other in a few weeks than they did sharing an office for years.
Lying in wait are crooked cops, bent border guards and terrible roads, but also welcoming and curious locals, eager to help the pair on their mission.
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AdventureBimbling.com, July 2010
‘... hapless calamities [before leaving the UK] provide an excellent introduction to the book, helping to shape the reader’s perspective of two distinctly individual characters, one impulsive and seemingly care-free,...
St Christopher’s Live Your Life ezine, September 2010
‘The concept… is enthralling… The fact that they battled corrupt border officials, dangerously eroded roads and the elements of Siberia to do it, is incredible. The result and the money...
Review by Andy Moreton on luxique.com, 4th August 2010
‘the adventure is chronicled in the highly entertaining Mission Mongolia... David (Treanor, the author), and Geoff, both fifty-something, are at times Butch and Sundance, at others Laurel and Hardy, but...
The Bookseller, 26th March 2010
'Nicely humorous.'