‘Abandoned World War II’ is a book for lovers of armchair travel and history

The Second World War truly lived up to its name, touching every corner of the world as is ably illustrated in the book Abandoned World War II Aircraft, Tanks & Warships by Chris McNab.

This fascinating coffee table book sits at the intersection of history and travel with an impressive collection of photographs of artifacts that litter the globe more than seven decades after the end of the the deadliest war in history.

Divided into geographical sections, the book collects photos from a variety of sources that show rusting tanks, crashed aircraft and sunken ships, but much more, including numerous fortifications and other historical remnants.

While the photos are the book’s biggest draw, the well researched captions are its best attribute, offering much needed context for many of the images, but also imparting interesting and lesser-known stories about the war in some of its most far-flung locales.

For me, the most interesting photos were the abandoned German submarine bases which were brutalist masterpieces before brutalism was a thing, but there were many other images which captivated me.

While the book seems comprehensive, the images chosen represent just a tiny portion of what travellers with a keen interest in the war’s history can discover. I can think of fortifications in Quebec’s GaspĂ© and at Cape Spear, Newfoundland that I have seen that could have been in the book, but aren’t, and the remains of a crashed Liberator bomber that rests on the top of a mountain in Quebec’s Laurentian Mountains as another example. 

Abandoned World War II isn’t for everyone, but if you sit at the centre of the Venn diagram where history, architecture, treasure hunting, archeology, travel and photography overlap, then you’ve found your next read.

Buy it on Amazon

Stuck in Customs is a travel photography blog that will inspire

Stuck in Customs screenshot

In the Instagram era, the idea of a travel photography blog almost sounds old-fashioned, but Stuck in Customs is a site that not only aims to inspire, but also to help visitors improve their own photos.

Renowned photographer Trey Ratcliff shares one image each day from his never-rending supply of exotic travel photos  and includes not only technical information about the image, but the stories behind it.

A pioneer in HDR photography, Ratcliff offers photography tutorials on his site and within his blog posts, will pull back the curtain on the enhancement techniques he uses for individual photos he’s featuring that day.

https://stuckincustoms.com/