Traveling could take you to a new, foreign place yet you feel like you've just arrived home, and in turn make you feel like a misfit when you arrived home. We travel to discover the 'difference' that a change of geographic location brings: different climate, different landscape, different language, different currency, different food, different side of the road to drive on, different power socket to charge your phone, different toilet flushing mechanism, the list goes on. Beyond the superficial, we also expect traveling to bring upon us a different perspective to look at life - the one waiting for us at home, one where everything is the same, too familiar to deserve a sense of wonder from the beholder. In this book, de Botton articulate with staggering precision so many ineffable feelings one might experience when traveling: that sinking calmness you feel when the plane just took off from the runway, that fascination that slowly turns into disillusionment once you stay too long at a new place, and that feeling of joyful 'smallness' you feel when standing in a larger-than-life, sublime places.