Part foreign affairs discourse, part humor, and part twisted self-help guide, The Geography of Bliss takes the reader from America to Iceland to India in search of happiness, or, in the crabby author's case, moments of "un-unhappiness." The book uses a beguiling mixture of travel, psychology, science and humor to investigate not what happiness is, but where it is. Are people in Switzerland happier because it is the most democratic country in the world? Do citizens of Qatar, awash in petrodollars, find joy in all that cash? Is the King of Bhutan a visionary for his initiative to calculate Gross National Happiness? Why is Asheville, North Carolina so damn happy? With engaging wit and surprising insights, Eric Weiner answers those questions and many others, offering travelers of all moods some interesting new ideas for sunnier destinations and dispositions.
The Geography of BlissOne Grump's Search for the Happiest Places in the World
Eric Weiner
eMusic Review 0
Pursuing the secret to happiness across the planet
As a foreign correspondent for National Public Radio, Eric Weiner covered mostly depressing places and stories — bubonic plague in India, the fall of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Saddam Hussein's Iraq. After all, as he confesses, misery makes for riveting radio. Listeners demand hard news, which usually entails body counts, poverty, famine or disease. But even a hardened journalist like Weiner still yearned to explore the flip side of misery. The result is the Geography of Bliss, in which Weiner travels the globe in search of the secret to happiness.
Weiner's journeys take him from the Netherlands (home of the World Database of Happiness, where scientists track happiness statistics) to places as far-flung as Switzerland, Bhutan, Qatar, Iceland, Moldova, Thailand, Britain and India, as well as the United States. Along the way, he discovers confounding and counterintuitive happiness data, such as the fact that rich and poor nations wallow in equal misery (Qatar and Moldova, respectively), and drastically different societal freedoms resulting in strikingly similar high happiness ratings (free-wheeling Netherlands vs. uptight Switzerland). In the end, these contradictions turn out to be precisely the point: there is no secret to happiness, because all happy nations find happiness in unique ways.
Narrated with the polish one expects from NPR correspondents, the recording is as riveting and moving as any hard news — and a whole lot more uplifting.