Page 65 - 101+ Tips for Solo Women Travelers
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1    Keep those flight socks                        RECOMMENDED

                                                             Reading
                Those fuzzy socks you get on the
          plane? Keep them in your purse when
          you are out and about, as you may be     Married to Bhutan: How One Woman
          required to remove your shoes to enter   Got Lost. Said “I Do.”
          certain shrines and temples (and local   And Found Bliss.
          homes). The socks are easy to slip on,   by Linda Leaming (Memoir, Bhutan)
          and will keep your feet clean.
                                                   Flame Tree, A Novel of
          2    Sort of solo in Bhutan              by Keith Dahlberg (Fiction, Burma)
                                                   Modern Burma

                Though you can plan your own
                                                   Daughter of Cambodia Remembers
          adventure and fly into Bhutan alone,     First They Killed My Father: A
          once you get there, the government       by Loung Ung (Memoir, Cambodia)
          requires all visitors (other than citizens   One Child: The Story of China’s Most
          of India, Bangladesh, or Maldives) to be   Radical Experiment
          accompanied by an authorized local       by Mei Fong (Nonfiction, China)
          tour guide. It’s part of the government’s
          e ort to limit mass tourism in order     White Tiger

                                                   by Aravind Adiga (Fiction, India)
          to protect and preserve the country’s
          natural environment and unique           Kyoto: A Cultural and
          culture. So you really can’t travel here   Literary History
          totally alone.                           by John Dougill (History, Japan)
          A Note from Harriet: You can explore     Escaping the Tiger
          Bhutan in a solo-friendly, small group   by Laura Manivong (Fiction, Laos)
          with O.A.T. And while your adventure will   House of Snow: An Anthology of the
          include a lot of small group activities,   Greatest Writing About Nepal
          you’ll also have plenty of opportunities   (Essays, Nepal)
          for individual discovery and the freedom
          to personalize your experience.          Sightseeing
                                                   by Rattawut Lapcharoensap (Short
          3   currency quirk                       Stories, Thailand)
              Know this Cambodian
                                                   The Sympathizer


          Even though the currency unit here is    by Viet Thanh Nguyen (Fiction, Vietnam)
          the riel, in reality it is usually only used
          for small purchases. The most widely used currency is U.S. dollars. Prices are usually
          quoted in dollars, too, so that makes things easy. However, U.S. coins are not widely
          used. So if you are owed change it will be given to you in riel. If you are going shopping
          in a local market, try to have some riel on hand, so you can pay for small goods in
          exact change or round your purchases up and not lose money.
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