Author Archives: asaoulayoub@gmail.com

Europe is not a continent that typically invites comparison with other planets. Its reputation is built on the human and the historical — on the accumulated architecture of three thousand years of civilization, on the cathedrals and the piazzas and the wine and the art and the particular quality of…

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Three days in Rome is an exercise in magnificent inadequacy. The city has been accumulating greatness for nearly three thousand years — layer upon layer of republic, empire, medieval commune, Renaissance papacy, Baroque spectacle, and living modern capital, each civilization building on and over and sometimes through the one that…

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Five days in Tokyo is both too much and not nearly enough, and this paradox is the starting point for understanding what kind of city you are dealing with. Too much because Tokyo — a city of 37 million people, the largest metropolitan area in the world, a place of…

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Paris has a reputation problem — not with the city itself, which is magnificent, but with the version of Paris that most first-time visitors experience. The version of excessive queuing, overpriced café terrasses on the tourist boulevards, the Mona Lisa glimpsed over seventeen rows of raised smartphones, the feeling that…

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Three days in Istanbul is not enough. This needs to be stated honestly and immediately, before the itinerary begins, because Istanbul is the kind of city that makes every visitor acutely aware of how much they are not seeing — the neighborhoods not reached, the mosques not entered, the ferry…

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Italy has a city problem — or rather, Italian tourism has a city problem. Every year, tens of millions of visitors funnel themselves through Rome, Florence, Venice, and Milan, queuing for the same monuments, eating at the same tourist-facing restaurants, and experiencing a version of Italy that, for all its…

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Europe has a tourist problem — or rather, European tourism has a concentration problem. Every year, hundreds of millions of visitors funnel themselves through the same dozen cities, the same famous squares, the same queues for the same monuments, creating a kind of feedback loop in which the most visited…

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The question gets asked constantly in travel forums, group chats, and itinerary planning conversations across the world: is two days in Venice actually worth it? It is a fair question. Venice is expensive. It is crowded. It is geographically awkward — a detour from the Rome-Florence-Milan triangle that most first-time…

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Solo travel is one of the most transformative things a person can do. Not because it is particularly brave or particularly difficult — though it can be both — but because it is the purest form of travel available. No compromises on where to go or when to leave or…

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Romance, like beauty, resists precise definition. It lives in moments rather than monuments — in the particular quality of light on a canal at dusk, in a shared plate of food so good it renders conversation temporarily unnecessary, in the feeling of being somewhere so beautiful together that the beauty…

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