Thursday, March 5, 2026

Calling Solo Travellers!

This one’s for the solo travellers. The ones who book their own tables for one without a second thought, who’ve mastered the art of the self-timer photograph, and who know, better than anyone, that the best conversations you’ll ever have on holiday are the ones with complete strangers. We see you and we’ve built something just for you.


The Single Supplement. The Two Most Frustrating Words in Travel.

Let’s talk about the single supplement, shall we? Because if you’ve been travelling solo for any length of time, you’ll know the particular, deeply irritating experience of finding the perfect trip – the right destination, the right dates, the right itinerary – only to discover that you’ll be paying somewhere between 20% and 100% extra simply because you’re not sharing a room with someone.

It’s one of the great injustices of the travel industry, and we are the first to admit it. The logic, of course, is straightforward enough – hotels charge per room, not per person, and a solo traveller occupying a double room costs the same as two people sharing it. But understanding why the single supplement exists doesn’t make it sting any less when you’re the one paying it. You’re already doing the brave, brilliant, liberating thing of travelling the world on your own terms. The last thing you need is to be financially penalised for it.

We’ve been listening to our solo travelling community for a long time now, and the message has been consistent and clear: you want great trips to extraordinary destinations, you want fair pricing, and you want to connect with like-minded travellers without it being forced or awkward. So we’ve done something about it.


Introducing the Untravelled Paths Solo Traveller Newsletter

We are absolutely delighted to announce the launch of our brand new solo traveller newsletter – a dedicated, regular update designed entirely around the needs, priorities, and (let’s be honest) the budgets of people who travel alone.

This isn’t a generic travel newsletter with a token “solo travel” tag bolted on. This is a resource built from the ground up for solo travellers, with offers, options, and information that are genuinely relevant to the way you travel. Here’s what you can expect:

Room Sharing: Travel Together, Save Together

One of the features we’re most excited about is our room-sharing matching service. If you’d like to avoid the single supplement altogether, we’ll give you the option to be matched with a fellow solo traveller of the same sex to share a twin room. It’s entirely optional, completely straightforward, and, for many of our travellers, the beginning of a genuine friendship.

We know what you might be thinking: sharing a room with a stranger sounds like a recipe for awkwardness at best and a travel nightmare at worst. But here’s what we’ve found, time and again, from the solo travellers in our community: a shared room with a carefully matched fellow traveller almost always works out brilliantly. You’re both there for the destination, not the room. You’re both independent, self-sufficient people who’ve chosen to travel alone. And you both, presumably, have a reasonable approach to bathroom timings.

The result? A significantly reduced cost, a built-in travel companion for the moments when you fancy some company, and very often, a friendship that outlasts the trip itself.

Single Supplement Waivers: Because Sometimes We Can Just Fix It

On selected trips and departures, we’re also able to heavily reduce or even waive the single supplement entirely, meaning you pay exactly the same price as someone in a couple or group, for your own private room, with no sharing required. These deals are genuinely brilliant when they come up, and our solo traveller newsletter subscribers will be the first, and sometimes the only, people to hear about them.

These opportunities arise for various reasons: group departures where numbers work in our favour, special arrangements with particular hotels and operators, or trips specifically designed with solo travellers in mind from the outset. Whatever the reason, the result is the same: solo travel at its absolute fairest.

Last Minute Deals: For the Spontaneous Solo Traveller

One of the great, underappreciated advantages of travelling solo is that you answer to nobody. You don’t need to negotiate annual leave with a partner, synchronise schedules with a friend, or convince anyone else that yes, two weeks in Georgia is an entirely reasonable idea. If a brilliant deal appears on a Tuesday afternoon for a departure on Saturday, you can say yes. Right then. No committee required.

Our solo traveller newsletter will bring you last minute deals on an ongoing basis, trips where availability has opened up, prices have dropped, or departures are looking for a few more adventurous souls to fill them out. If you’re the kind of traveller who thrives on spontaneity and loves the particular thrill of a brilliant last-minute bargain, this section of the newsletter alone will be worth signing up for.

Early Bird Offers: For the Planners Among You

Of course, not every solo traveller is a spontaneous last-minute booker. Some of you are planners, the ones with colour-coded spreadsheets, carefully researched packing lists, and a trip already forming in your imagination for next autumn. We see you too, and we have something for you as well.

Our newsletter will also feature early bird offers on upcoming departures, discounted rates for solo travellers who book well in advance, often with the added bonus of the best room allocations, the widest choice of optional activities, and the peace of mind of knowing it’s sorted. Early bird pricing on solo travel can make a genuinely significant difference to the overall cost of a trip, and our subscribers will always have first access.

Discounted Trips: Great Destinations, Honest Prices

Beyond the last minute and early bird categories, we’ll also be featuring a rolling selection of discounted trips specifically curated for solo travellers. These will span a wide range of destinations, styles, and budgets – from short European breaks to longer haul adventures, from active trekking holidays to more leisurely cultural escapes. The common thread will be quality, value, and the knowledge that every trip on the list has been chosen with the solo traveller’s experience specifically in mind.


A Word on Travelling Solo – From Those of Us Who Get It

Solo travel is one of the most rewarding, liberating, and genuinely life-enriching things a person can do. It teaches you things about yourself that group travel simply can’t – how resourceful you are, how adaptable, how capable of navigating the unexpected with grace and good humour. It gives you complete freedom: to go where you want, when you want, at whatever pace suits you on a given day. To linger over a lunch for two hours because the wine is good and the view is better. To change your plans entirely because you’ve just met someone fascinating on a train platform.

But we also know it has its frustrations. The single supplement is the obvious one, but there’s also the occasional pang of loneliness that even the most committed solo traveller feels sometimes, usually at a particularly beautiful sunset or over an especially good meal that deserves to be shared. There’s the gentle social pressure from well-meaning friends and family who can’t quite understand why you’d choose to go alone. And there’s the practical reality that some of the world’s most extraordinary experiences – multi-day treks, small-group tours, certain styles of accommodation – are simply designed around the assumption that you’ll be travelling in pairs.

Our solo traveller newsletter is our way of addressing all of this – not with platitudes, but with practical solutions, genuine value, and a community of like-minded people who understand exactly what it means to travel the world on your own terms.


Who Is This Newsletter For?

In short: anyone who travels solo, is considering travelling solo, or is solo-curious (it’s a thing, we promise). Whether you’re a seasoned solo adventurer who has been navigating the world independently for decades, or someone who has recently found themselves travelling alone for the first time and is working out what that means for them — this newsletter is for you.

It’s for the solo traveller who is perfectly happy in their own company but wouldn’t say no to a like-minded travel companion on the right trip. It’s for the one who loves spontaneous last-minute adventures and the one who plans meticulously six months in advance. It’s for the budget-conscious traveller who is thoroughly fed up with paying more than their fair share, and for the one who simply wants to know that someone out there in the travel industry is thinking about their specific needs.

We are. We genuinely are.


Sign Up Today — It’s Free, It’s Friendly, and It’s Just for You

Signing up to the Untravelled Paths Solo Traveller Newsletter is completely free and all it takes is a few clicks of a button. You’ll receive regular updates with the latest solo travel deals, room-sharing opportunities, single supplement waivers, last minute offers, early bird discounts, and destination inspiration — all chosen specifically with solo travellers in mind.

You can unsubscribe at any time, we will never share your details with third parties, and we promise to keep every email genuinely useful, genuinely relevant, and genuinely worth opening.

The world is full of extraordinary places waiting to be explored. The single supplement is not a good enough reason to miss them. Sign up to our solo traveller newsletter today and let’s find your next untravelled path together.

👉 Please Add me to the Solo Traveller Newsletter


Are you a solo traveller with thoughts, questions, or experiences you’d like to share? We’d love to hear from you in the comments below. And if you know a fellow solo traveller who’d benefit from this newsletter, please do pass it on – the more the merrier. Figuratively speaking, of course. You’re still very much in charge of your own itinerary.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Calling Solo Travellers! appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/calling-solo-travellers/

Is Transylvania the Most Beautiful Region in Europe?

It’s a bold claim. Europe is hardly short on beauty – from the fjords of Norway to the Amalfi Coast. But if you’re looking for dramatic mountains, storybook towns, fortified churches, wildlife, and far fewer crowds than Western Europe, one region keeps rising to the top of the conversation: Transylvania.

So… is Transylvania the most beautiful region in Europe? Let’s take a closer look.


Where Is Transylvania?

Transylvania is a historic region in central Romania, bordered by the sweeping arc of the Carpathian Mountains. Despite its gothic reputation (thank you, Dracula), the reality is far more varied – and arguably far more impressive.

Think alpine scenery, medieval cities, rolling countryside, Saxon villages and one of Europe’s last great wildernesses.


1. The Mountains: Wild, Dramatic and Underrated

If natural scenery defines beauty, Transylvania makes a strong case.

The Carpathians are less developed than the Alps, meaning:

  • Fewer ski resorts
  • Fewer cable cars
  • Far more untouched landscapes

You’ll find:

  • Bear and lynx habitats
  • High mountain passes like the Transfăgărășan
  • Deep forests and limestone gorges

Unlike more commercial mountain regions, you don’t feel managed or curated. You feel like you’ve stumbled into something ancient.

And in a Europe increasingly shaped for tourism, that rawness matters.


2. Fairytale Cities Without the Western European Crowds

Transylvania’s cities look like they’ve been lifted from a storybook.

Brașov

Surrounded by mountains, with cobbled streets and pastel baroque buildings. It has just enough buzz without losing its charm.

Sighisoara

A beautifully preserved medieval citadel of cobbled streets, pastel houses and towers, offering authentic Transylvanian charm without Western Europe’s overwhelming tourist crowds.

Sibiu

Often considered Romania’s most elegant city. Think grand squares, Saxon architecture and rooftop “eyes” watching over the old town.

Cluj-Napoca

Livelier, creative and youthful – blending history with modern energy.

Compare this with Venice or Barcelona in peak season. You can still hear your own footsteps here.


3. The Saxon Villages: Europe 100 Years Ago

One of Transylvania’s most beautiful features isn’t dramatic at all – it’s rural life.

Scattered across the countryside are fortified churches and villages built by Transylvanian Saxons in the Middle Ages. Many feel frozen in time, with horse-drawn carts still part of daily life.

Places like:

  • Viscri
  • Biertan

offer a glimpse of a slower Europe that’s vanished elsewhere.

It’s understated beauty – not flashy, not polished – but deeply atmospheric.


4. Castles, Legends and Cinematic Landscapes

Yes, there’s the famous one.

Bran Castle is often linked to Dracula (loosely, at best), but beyond the marketing it’s genuinely picturesque – perched dramatically above forested hills.

But the real architectural gem?

Corvin Castle – a vast Gothic-Renaissance fortress that looks like it belongs in a fantasy film.

Add misty valleys and medieval citadels and you start to see why photographers quietly adore this region.


5. Wildlife and Wilderness You Can’t Find in Most of Europe

Transylvania is home to one of the largest populations of brown bears in Europe.

Let that sink in.

While much of Western Europe’s wilderness has been tamed, here you still find:

  • Ancient forests
  • Traditional hay meadows
  • Large carnivores
  • Remote hiking routes

If beauty is tied to authenticity and biodiversity, Transylvania ranks remarkably high.


How Does Transylvania Compare to Other “Beautiful” Regions?

Let’s be honest. Europe has serious competition:

  • The Dolomites in Italy
  • The Scottish Highlands
  • The French Alps
  • The Norwegian fjords

But here’s where Transylvania stands apart:

Factor Transylvania Western Europe Hotspots
Crowds Low to moderate High to overwhelming
Cost Affordable Expensive
Authentic rural life Very strong Often diluted
Wilderness Vast and intact More managed

In pure drama, it competes.
In authenticity, it often wins.
In value for money, it’s hard to beat.


So… Is Transylvania the Most Beautiful Region in Europe?

Beauty is subjective. But if your criteria include:

  • Mountain scenery
  • Medieval architecture
  • Traditional villages
  • Wildlife
  • Affordability
  • Fewer crowds

Then yes – Transylvania deserves to be in the top tier of Europe’s most beautiful regions.

It may not shout as loudly as Italy or Switzerland. But that’s precisely the point.

It’s not polished for mass tourism.
It’s not overexposed on Instagram.
It still feels discovered rather than consumed.

And in 2026, that might be the most beautiful thing of all.


Planning a Trip to Transylvania?

If you’re looking to experience the region beyond the obvious highlights – from hidden Saxon villages to remote Carpathian landscapes – travelling with local insight makes all the difference.

Because sometimes the most beautiful places in Europe aren’t the ones everyone already knows about.

They’re the ones waiting quietly in the mountains.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Is Transylvania the Most Beautiful Region in Europe? appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/is-transylvania-the-most-beautiful-region-in-europe/

The Best Books to Read Before Taking an Untravelled Path

There is no better way to prepare for a journey than to lose yourself in a book set in the place you’re about to visit. A great travel read does something a guidebook simply cannot, it gets under the skin of a destination, fills it with characters, atmosphere, and emotion, and means that by the time you arrive, you already feel a deep, personal connection to the streets, landscapes, and stories unfolding around you. Here at Untravelled Paths, we are firm believers that the best trips begin long before you reach the airport. So settle in, put the kettle on, and allow us to introduce you to the books we think every traveller should read before visiting these extraordinary destinations.

Whether you’re a voracious reader working through a towering to-be-read pile or someone who saves their books strictly for the beach, this list has something for every kind of traveller. These aren’t just books about places – they are books that will make you feel those places in your bones, long before you set foot there.


Romania — Along the Enchanted Way: Ten Years in Transylvania by William Blacker

📖 Best for: Romantics, slow travellers, and anyone enchanted by a vanishing world

If there is one book that perfectly captures the spirit of rural Transylvania, its extraordinary beauty, its timeless rhythms, and its quiet defiance of the modern world, it is William Blacker’s luminous memoir. Blacker, a young Englishman, arrived in Romania in the early 1990s, fell hopelessly in love with the country and its people, and ended up spending a decade living amongst the farming communities of the Carpathian foothills.

What follows is one of the finest travel memoirs of recent decades: a portrait of a world of horse-drawn carts, hand-scythed meadows, and villages where the rhythms of medieval life had survived, almost intact, into the 21st century. Blacker writes about Transylvania with a tenderness and precision that is genuinely beautiful, and his account of the Roma and Saxon communities he lived amongst is sympathetic, vivid, and deeply moving.

Read this before a trip to Romania and you will arrive with a profound understanding of and affection for a country that is far richer, stranger, and more magnificent than its vampire mythology suggests. The landscapes Blacker describes, the food he eats, the festivals he attends – you will want to find every last one of them. And in rural Transylvania, remarkably, many of them still exist.

✈️ Planning a trip to Romania? Explore our Transylvania travel guides for itineraries, tips, and hidden gem recommendations.


South Africa — The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay

📖 Best for: History lovers, adventure seekers, and anyone moved by stories of resilience

Set against the backdrop of South Africa in the 1930s and 40s, Bryce Courtenay’s magnificent coming-of-age novel follows Peekay, a young English-speaking boy navigating the brutal realities of apartheid-era South Africa with courage, intelligence, and an unbreakable spirit. It is, at its heart, a story about the power of the individual to rise above circumstances, but it is also one of the finest evocations of the South African landscape, culture, and social history ever committed to the page.

Courtenay writes about South Africa with the authority and passion of someone who knows it intimately – the vast, sun-bleached landscapes of the Highveld, the red dust of the bush, the complex, painful social divisions of a country in turmoil. Reading The Power of One before visiting South Africa will give you a visceral, emotional understanding of the country’s history that no textbook could provide, and will make the landscapes you travel through feel weighted with meaning and story.

It is also, quite simply, a tremendously good read – thrilling, funny, heartbreaking, and ultimately uplifting. Pack it for the long-haul flight and you will barely notice the hours passing.

✈️ Planning a trip to South Africa? Browse our South Africa destination guides for inspiration on where to go and what to see.


Colombia — One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez

📖 Best for: Literary travellers, dreamers, and anyone who believes in the magic of a place

There is perhaps no more famous novel in the history of Latin American literature and with very good reason. Gabriel García Márquez’s masterpiece, the book that effectively introduced the world to magical realism, is a sweeping, hypnotic saga following seven generations of the Buendía family in the fictional town of Macondo. It is a book that feels like Colombia itself: lush, intense, bewildering, deeply human, and shot through with an almost supernatural beauty.

Reading One Hundred Years of Solitude before visiting Colombia won’t give you a literal guide to the country – Macondo is fictional, after all, though it is believed to be inspired by García Márquez’s hometown of Aracataca in the Caribbean coast region. What it will give you is something far more valuable: a feel for the Colombian soul. The heat, the passion, the fatalism, the joy, the violence, the tenderness – all of it is here, rendered in prose so extraordinary it has the quality of a dream you can’t quite shake.

Colombia is a country that rewards those who arrive with open eyes and an open heart, and no book opens both quite like this one. Read it slowly, savour every sentence, and arrive in Cartagena, Medellín, or the coffee region ready to see magic everywhere because in Colombia, it genuinely is.

✈️ Planning a trip to Colombia? Discover our Colombia travel guides for everything from Cartagena’s colonial streets to the coffee region’s misty hillsides.


Bosnia & Herzegovina — The Bridge on the Drina by Ivo Andrić

📖 Best for: History lovers, cultural travellers, and anyone seeking to understand the Balkans

Ivo Andrić won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1961, and The Bridge on the Drina is the book that sealed his legacy. A sweeping historical novel spanning four centuries of life in the Bosnian town of Višegrad, it uses the great Ottoman bridge over the Drina River as its fixed, unchanging centrepiece – a witness to the generations of people, empires, and conflicts that wash past it like the river itself.

It is a book of extraordinary scope and humanity, and it is essential reading for anyone trying to understand the extraordinarily complex tapestry of cultures, religions, and histories that makes the Balkans, and Bosnia in particular, so endlessly fascinating. Andrić writes about the coexistence of Muslim, Orthodox, Catholic, and Jewish communities with a nuance and compassion that feels more relevant than ever, and his portrait of a place caught perpetually between East and West resonates deeply with the Bosnia you will encounter when you travel there today.

Visit Višegrad after reading this novel and standing on that bridge becomes one of the most quietly moving travel moments you can have in the Balkans. It is the kind of book that changes the way you see a place and that is the highest compliment we can pay any travel read.

✈️ Planning a trip to Bosnia & Herzegovina? Explore our Bosnia travel guides and discover one of Europe’s most extraordinary and underrated destinations.


Morocco — The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

📖 Best for: Soul seekers, first-time travellers, and anyone standing at a crossroads

Paulo Coelho’s beloved fable follows Santiago, a young Andalusian shepherd boy who travels to the Egyptian pyramids in pursuit of treasure and discovers, along the way, that the journey itself is the destination. Much of the story unfolds across the Moroccan landscape – the souks, the desert, the ancient trading routes and Coelho captures the country’s atmosphere of mystery, colour, and spiritual possibility with a lightness of touch that makes it irresistible.

The Alchemist is one of the bestselling books in history for a reason: its message, that the universe conspires to help those who pursue their dreams, is simple, universal, and deeply comforting. But it is also a genuinely evocative portrait of Morocco as a place of transformation, where the noise and intensity of the medinas, the silence of the Sahara, and the warmth of the people combine to create an experience that feels, for many travellers, genuinely life-changing.

Read it on the plane to Marrakech or Fez and arrive ready to follow your own legend through the winding streets of the medina. Morocco has a way of making Coelho’s philosophy feel not like a self-help cliché but like a lived, breathing truth.

✈️ Planning a trip to Morocco? Browse our Morocco travel guides for medina explorations, desert adventures, and everything in between.


Italy — Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert

📖 Best for: Solo travellers, food lovers, and anyone in need of a fresh start

Say what you will about the cultural phenomenon that is Eat, Pray, Love and plenty of people have said plenty, but Elizabeth Gilbert’s memoir of self-discovery across Italy, India, and Bali contains some of the most joyful, sensuous writing about Italian food, language, and daily life that you will find anywhere. The Italy section alone, set largely in Rome, is worth the price of the book.

Gilbert arrives in Rome broken-hearted, knowing nobody, speaking no Italian, and with a single, gloriously uncomplicated mission: to eat as much extraordinary food as possible and learn to enjoy her own company. What follows is a love letter to la dolce vita – to Roman pizza, Neapolitan gelato, the musicality of the Italian language, and the particular, irreplaceable pleasure of sitting at a pavement café with a coffee and absolutely nowhere to be.

For those planning their first trip to Italy, or returning after years away then Eat, Pray, Love is a reminder of what makes the country so enduringly magical: its food, its beauty, its insistence on the importance of pleasure, and its extraordinary capacity to make even the most world-weary traveller feel completely, utterly alive. Read the Italy chapters before your trip and you will arrive hungry in the very best possible sense.

✈️ Planning a trip to Italy? Discover our Italy travel guides for city breaks, coastal escapes, and culinary adventures across the peninsula.


Albania — Chronicle in Stone by Ismail Kadare

📖 Best for: Literary travellers, history enthusiasts, and anyone heading off the beaten track

Ismail Kadare is Albania’s greatest writer, a Nobel Prize contender for decades and a literary giant whose work has introduced the world to a country that remains, for most readers, almost entirely unknown. Chronicle in Stone, his most accessible and beloved novel, is the perfect introduction to both the writer and the country.

Set in the ancient Ottoman city of Gjirokastër during the Second World War, Kadare’s own home city, the novel is narrated through the eyes of a young boy watching the war arrive in his extraordinary hillside town of grey stone towers and labyrinthine streets. It is a book of remarkable richness: funny, poetic, melancholy, and utterly alive with the sights, sounds, and textures of a world on the cusp of violent change.

Gjirokastër is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of Albania’s most visited destinations and reading Chronicle in Stone before you go transforms the experience completely. You will walk its cobbled streets with Kadare’s characters at your shoulder, see the stone towers as he saw them, and understand the city’s extraordinary character in a way that no guidebook could ever convey. It is, in the truest sense, the ideal companion for a trip to one of the Balkans’ most remarkable and underrated destinations.

✈️ Planning a trip to Albania? Explore our Albania travel guides and discover why this is one of Europe’s most exciting emerging destinations.


Georgia — The Eighth Life by Nino Haratischvili

📖 Best for: Epic novel lovers, history enthusiasts, and anyone with Georgia on their travel list

At nearly a thousand pages, The Eighth Life is not a book you read casually, it is a book you inhabit. Nino Haratischvili’s extraordinary saga follows six generations of a Georgian family from the early 20th century through the Soviet era and beyond, weaving together personal drama, historical catastrophe, love, loss, and the enduring power of memory into one of the most ambitious and rewarding novels of recent years.

It is, quite simply, the definitive literary portrait of Georgia – a country that has lived through more history than most, and whose complex, painful, and beautiful story is rendered here with breathtaking skill. Haratischvili writes about Tbilisi, the Caucasus, and the peculiar intensity of Georgian life and culture with an insider’s authority and a storyteller’s gift, and the result is a book that makes you feel you know Georgia, its streets, its smells, its impossible contradictions before you’ve ever set foot there.

Start it at least a few weeks before your trip; you’ll need the time. But arrive in Tbilisi having finished it and the city will feel like somewhere you have always, in some deep and inexplicable way, belonged.

✈️ Planning a trip to Georgia? Browse our Georgia travel guides for everything from Tbilisi’s old town to the Caucasus Mountains.


Finland — The Year of the Hare by Arto Paasilinna

📖 Best for: Nature lovers, escapists, and anyone who has ever dreamed of dropping everything

Arto Paasilinna’s slim, deadpan comic masterpiece is one of the most beloved novels in Finnish literary history and one of the most quietly radical books about the relationship between humans and the natural world ever written. A burnt-out Helsinki journalist accidentally injures a young hare with his car, decides on impulse to take the animal and disappear into the Finnish wilderness, and proceeds to live the kind of life most of us only fantasise about: free, elemental, and utterly liberated from the demands of modern existence.

The Year of the Hare is funny, genuinely, warmly, unexpectedly funny but it is also a deeply felt love letter to Finland’s extraordinary landscape: its vast forests, its thousands of lakes, its silence, its seasons, and the particular Finnish relationship with nature that is unlike anything found elsewhere in Europe. Reading it will give you an entirely new way of seeing the Finnish countryside, and a profound appreciation for the concept of mökki, the Finnish tradition of the summer cabin, that will make you want to rent one immediately.

It is also a book about freedom, and there is no better place to read about freedom than Finland, where the landscape seems to offer it in abundance to anyone willing to slow down and look.

✈️ Planning a trip to Finland? Discover our Finland travel guides for northern lights adventures, lake district escapes, and Helsinki city breaks.


Ethiopia — Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese

📖 Best for: Adventurous readers, medical drama fans, and anyone drawn to Africa’s most ancient civilisation

Abraham Verghese’s sweeping novel is one of the great medical dramas in modern fiction, but it is also one of the finest portraits of Ethiopia ever written. Set largely in Addis Ababa across several tumultuous decades of the country’s history, it follows twin brothers born in a mission hospital to a nun and a surgeon, tracing their lives through the extraordinary political and social upheavals of 20th-century Ethiopia with compassion, intelligence, and a storyteller’s instinct for the perfectly chosen detail.

Verghese, himself a doctor and the son of Indian immigrants to Ethiopia, writes about the country with a deep, affectionate authority. His Addis Ababa is vivid, chaotic, beautiful, and heartbreaking by turns: a city of contrasts, of ancient tradition and violent modernity, of extraordinary human resilience and devastating loss. The Ethiopian landscape, the highlands, the eucalyptus forests, the red dust roads, comes alive in his pages in a way that will make the country feel startlingly familiar when you arrive.

Ethiopia is one of the world’s oldest civilisations and one of the most rewarding travel destinations on the African continent. Read Cutting for Stone first and you will arrive not as a tourist but as someone who already, in some small way, understands.

✈️ Planning a trip to Ethiopia? Explore our Ethiopia travel guides for ancient churches, extraordinary landscapes, and one of Africa’s most fascinating cultures.


For Every Journey — The Travels of Marco Polo by Marco Polo

📖 Best for: Every traveller, everywhere, always

We couldn’t compile a list of the best travel reads without including the book that, for many, invented travel writing as we know it. Dictated by Marco Polo to a fellow prisoner in a Genoese gaol in 1298, The Travels recounts his extraordinary 24-year journey from Venice through the Middle East, Central Asia, China, and beyond – a journey so vast and so improbable that his contemporaries largely refused to believe it had happened.

Reading Marco Polo today is a peculiar and thrilling experience. Parts of it feel uncannily modern – his eye for detail, his curiosity about other cultures, his delight in the strangeness of the world are recognisable instincts in any seasoned traveller. Other parts feel like pure fantasy: tales of unicorns, dog-headed men, and cities paved with gold that blur the line between reportage and legend in ways that are never entirely resolved.

But that ambiguity is, perhaps, the point. The Travels of Marco Polo is a reminder that travel has always been, at its heart, about the stories we tell and the stories we bring home. It is a book that will make you want to go everywhere, see everything, and return full of tales that no one quite believes. Which is, when you think about it, the very best kind of journey.

Pack it. Read it anywhere. It belongs on every traveller’s shelf.


The Final Chapter: Your Reading List Awaits

The best trips are the ones that stay with you long after you’ve unpacked — and the best books are the ones that make a destination feel like a place you carry inside you, not just somewhere you’ve visited. Every title on this list has the power to do exactly that.

Whether you’re heading to the forests of Finland, the souks of Morocco, the mountains of Georgia, or the ancient stone streets of Albania, there is a book on this list waiting to transform your journey from a holiday into something altogether more profound. Read it before you go, pack it in your bag, and see how differently a place looks when you arrive with its stories already alive in your imagination.

Ready to find your next untravelled path? Browse our full collection of destination guides, travel itineraries, hidden gem recommendations and start planning the trip that goes with your next great read.


We’d love to know – have you read any of these books before visiting their home countries? Did it change your experience? Drop your thoughts in the comments below, and feel free to suggest any titles we might have missed. Happy reading, and even happier travels.

Written by James Chisnall

The post The Best Books to Read Before Taking an Untravelled Path appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/books-to-read-before-taking-an-untravelled-path/

Thursday, February 26, 2026

The Best Balkan Country to Visit? Here’s Our Verdict

Right, we’re going to stir things up a little. Declaring one country “the best” in the Balkans is, frankly, an impossible task, and we know it. Every destination on this list has beaches, culture, incredible food, dramatic scenery, and a nightlife scene worth writing home about. But where’s the fun in saying that? Instead, we’ve picked the single biggest strength of each of our five Balkan favourites — the thing it does better than anywhere else in the region. Think of it as less of a verdict and more of a very enjoyable argument starter. We fully expect you to disagree with us in the comments, and we absolutely cannot wait.

The Balkans is one of Europe’s most rewarding and endlessly surprising regions. Tucked into the south-eastern corner of the continent, it packs more history, natural drama, culinary brilliance, and raw energy into a relatively small area than almost anywhere else you could name. But if you had to pick just one country for your next trip, which would it be? We’ve put five of the finest head to head and given each one its moment in the spotlight. The debate starts now.

Bosnia & Herzegovina — Best for Culture & History

🏆 Biggest Strength: A living, breathing lesson in resilience, complexity, and coexistence

If Albania wins on coastline, Bosnia & Herzegovina wins on something altogether more profound: soul. No country in the Balkans, arguably no country in Europe, offers quite the same depth of human story as this small, extraordinary nation. To travel here is to engage with history in the most immediate, moving, and ultimately uplifting way imaginable.

Sarajevo is unlike any other city on the continent. Walk its streets and within a few minutes you’ll pass a 16th-century Ottoman mosque, a 19th-century Austro-Hungarian cathedral, a vibrant Jewish quarter, and a building still bearing the scars of a siege that ended less than thirty years ago. The city wears its extraordinary layered history openly and without self-pity, and the result is one of the most compelling, thought-provoking urban experiences in Europe. The warmth of its people, the strength of its coffee culture, and the quality of its food make it a place you’ll find yourself thinking about long after you’ve returned home.

Beyond the capital, Mostar’s rebuilt Stari Most bridge is one of the Balkans’ most iconic images, a powerful symbol of reconstruction and hope that is even more moving in person than in photographs. The medieval village of Počitelj, the ancient city of Jajce with its waterfall tumbling beneath a fortress, and the rural heartlands of the Neretva Valley all add layers to a country that rewards slow, curious, engaged travel more than almost anywhere else on this list.

Bosnia demands more from its visitors than a beach destination does. It asks you to engage, to sit with complexity, and to listen. In return, it offers a perspective on history and humanity that is genuinely transformative, and that, in our view, is the most valuable thing travel can give you.

🗺 Why it wins: For travellers who want their holidays to mean something, Bosnia & Herzegovina delivers an emotional and cultural richness that no other Balkan destination can match.


Serbia — Best for Nightlife

🏆 Biggest Strength: The most electric, exhilarating nightlife scene in the entire region

There are cities with good nightlife, there are cities with great nightlife, and then there is Belgrade. Serbia’s capital doesn’t just have the best party scene in the Balkans, it has one of the best party scenes in the world, full stop. If you’ve never experienced a Saturday night on the banks of the Danube, with music thumping from a flotilla of river bars until well past sunrise, you simply haven’t seen what a city night out can truly be.

Belgrade’s splavovi, floating river clubs moored along the Sava and Danube, are the stuff of legend among European nightlife aficionados. These sprawling, multi-deck venues host everything from turbo-folk nights to world-class electronic music, and they operate on a timetable that would make most Western European cities weep: things don’t really get going until 2am, and finishing before dawn is considered leaving early. The city’s underground club scene is equally formidable, with venues like Drugstore and Tunnel drawing internationally renowned DJs to intimate, brilliantly curated spaces.

But Belgrade’s appeal isn’t purely nocturnal. By day it’s a fascinating, slightly rough-around-the-edges city with a genuinely compelling history, excellent food, a thriving café culture, and the imposing Kalemegdan Fortress watching over the confluence of two great rivers. The Skadarlija bohemian quarter is one of the most charming streets in the Balkans for an evening meal. And Serbia beyond Belgrade, the monasteries of Studenica, the landscapes of Tara National Park, the wine region of Župa, is a revelation for those willing to explore further.

But let’s be honest: you’re coming for the nights. And Serbia will deliver nights you’ll be telling stories about for years.

🗺 Why it wins: Belgrade’s nightlife is in a category entirely its own, a genuinely world-class party scene that combines scale, quality, and staying power in a way no other Balkan city comes close to matching.


Montenegro — Best for Landscapes

🏆 Biggest Strength: Jaw-dropping scenery packed into Europe’s second-smallest country

Montenegro means “Black Mountain”, and one look at this tiny, dramatic country explains exactly why. Packing an almost implausible variety of landscapes into an area roughly the size of Wales, Montenegro is a destination that consistently leaves visitors utterly speechless. Mountains, canyons, glacial lakes, medieval walled towns, and a fjord-like bay that rivals anything in Scandinavia, all within a two-hour drive of each other. It’s almost showing off, frankly.

The Bay of Kotor is Montenegro’s undisputed showpiece: a dramatic, winding inlet flanked by vertiginous limestone mountains and dotted with medieval villages, Venetian fortifications, and tiny island churches. The fortified old town of Kotor itself is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, a perfectly preserved maze of Venetian streets and Baroque churches enclosed by ancient walls that climb straight up the mountain behind the town. Watching the light change on the bay at sunset from those walls is one of the great travel experiences in the Balkans.

Head inland and the drama only intensifies. Durmitor National Park is a UNESCO-listed wilderness of glacial lakes, dense forest, and peaks that top 2,500 metres, offering some of the finest hiking, skiing, and white-water rafting in south-eastern Europe. The Tara River Canyon, the deepest canyon in Europe, cuts through the park in a series of emerald gorges so beautiful they barely seem real. And the ancient royal capital of Cetinje, the Adriatic resort town of Budva, and the near-perfectly preserved medieval village of Perast each add their own distinct character to a country that feels, at times, like the greatest hits of European scenery compiled into one place.

🗺 Why it wins: For sheer, concentrated landscape drama, Montenegro is unbeatable in the Balkans. No other country in the region packs this much natural and architectural beauty into such a compact, accessible space.


Slovenia — Best for Food & Wine

🏆 Biggest Strength: The most sophisticated, creative, and delicious food scene in the region

Slovenia is the quiet overachiever of the Balkans, a small, immaculately kept country that consistently punches far above its weight in almost every category, but perhaps nowhere more impressively than at the table. For a nation of just two million people, Slovenia’s food and wine culture is extraordinary: nuanced, creative, deeply rooted in local tradition, and increasingly recognised on the world stage as something genuinely special.

The capital Ljubljana has quietly become one of Europe’s most exciting food cities. Its compact, walkable old town is lined with restaurants, wine bars, and market stalls showcasing the best of Slovenian produce, and the quality is consistently remarkable. The Open Kitchen market on Fridays brings together the country’s finest chefs and food producers in a celebration of local ingredients that is as enjoyable as any food festival we’ve attended anywhere in Europe. Ljubljana also boasts more Michelin-starred restaurants per capita than almost any comparable European city, a statistic that surprises most visitors but really, really shouldn’t.

Slovenia’s wine regions are equally impressive and remain one of the best-kept secrets in European viticulture. The Brda region, bordering Italy’s Friuli, produces elegant, mineral whites and rich orange wines of genuine world-class quality. The Vipava Valley is one of Europe’s most exciting emerging wine regions, with a new generation of passionate winemakers crafting bottles that are attracting serious international attention. And the Karst region is home to Teran, a distinctive, tannic red wine made from the Refošk grape that is like nothing else you’ll taste in the Balkans.

Beyond Ljubljana and the wine regions, Lake Bled provides one of the continent’s most iconic backdrops for a long, lazy lunch. The Soča Valley, impossibly, luminously turquoise, rivals any Alpine scenery in Western Europe. And Slovenian hospitality, quietly warm and impeccably gracious, makes every meal feel like a genuine occasion.

🗺 Why it wins: For food lovers and wine enthusiasts, Slovenia is the standout destination in the Balkans, a small country with a culinary culture of remarkable depth, creativity, and quality that consistently exceeds all expectations.


Albania — Best for Beaches

🏆 Biggest Strength: The most beautiful, unspoilt coastline in the Balkans

Let’s get one thing straight: Albania‘s beaches are spectacular. We’re talking impossibly turquoise water, dramatic clifftop backdrops, and stretches of sand that, for now, at least, remain blissfully free of the crowds that have swamped much of the Mediterranean. If you haven’t swum in the Ionian Sea off the Albanian Riviera yet, it belongs at the very top of your travel bucket list.

The Albanian Riviera runs for roughly 200 kilometres along the country’s south-western coast, and it is, quite simply, one of Europe’s last great coastal secrets. Towns like Ksamil, with its tiny offshore islands and crystal-clear shallows, and Himara, a characterful hillside town perched above a gorgeous bay, offer the kind of beach holiday that Greece and Croatia used to deliver before everyone found out about them. The water is warm, the scenery is dramatic, and the prices are, compared to anywhere west of here, almost laughably low.

Further up the coast, Sazan Island and the Karaburun Peninsula form a protected marine park of extraordinary beauty, accessible only by boat and largely untouched by development. Snorkelling and diving here is world-class, with visibility that will genuinely astound you. And the beaches around Dhermi? Pebbled, pristine, and backed by mountains that tumble straight into the sea, they’re the kind of thing you see on a screensaver and assume must be photoshopped.

Albania’s beaches won’t stay this quiet forever. The secret is getting out, development is creeping in, and the crowds will follow. But right now, in this golden window, the Albanian Riviera is the finest coastal destination in the Balkans, and arguably one of the finest in all of Europe.

🗺 Why it wins: Nowhere else in the Balkans delivers this combination of breathtaking coastal scenery, warm clear water, and genuine seclusion, all at prices that make the whole thing feel almost too good to be true.


So, Which Is the Best Country in the Balkans?

Here’s the honest answer: it entirely depends on what you’re after. If you’re chasing the perfect beach holiday, Albania is your answer. If you want to travel somewhere that genuinely changes how you see the world, get yourself to Bosnia. If you live for a great night out, Serbia will become your favourite country on earth. If landscapes are what moves you, Montenegro will leave you breathless. And if food and wine are your primary reason for travelling, as they should be, then Slovenia is the one.

The Balkans rewards curious travellers more than almost any other region in Europe. These five countries are wildly different in character, yet share a generosity of spirit, a richness of history, and a depth of experience that the continent’s more-visited corners often struggle to match. Whatever your travel style, your perfect Balkan destination is waiting for you here.

The real question isn’t which country is best, it’s which one you’re visiting first. Browse our full collection of Balkan trips and start planning your next adventure today. Your untravelled path is closer than you think.


We know you have opinions on this one, and we want to hear them! Which Balkan country do you think deserves the crown? Drop your verdict in the comments below, and don’t forget to share this post with a fellow travel lover who’s ready for their next great adventure.

Written by James Chisnall

The post The Best Balkan Country to Visit? Here’s Our Verdict appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/the-best-balkan-country-to-visit-heres-our-verdict/

Europe on a Budget: Incredible Destinations That Won’t Break the Bank

Think Europe has to cost a fortune? Think again. While the crowds queue up at the Eiffel Tower and the Colosseum, a handful of extraordinary countries are quietly offering world-class scenery, rich history, and mouthwatering food, all for a fraction of the price. Grab your passport; this is the budget traveller’s guide to Europe’s most underrated destinations.

The secret is well and truly out, Western Europe can be expensive. But venture a little further east, dip into the Balkans, or head towards the Caucasus, and you’ll discover a completely different side of the continent: one brimming with authenticity, warmth, and incredible value for money. These five destinations consistently rank among the cheapest European destinations for tourists, yet they punch well above their weight when it comes to experiences.

Here’s our pick of the best affordable European countries worth adding to your travel wish list right now.


1. Albania: The Riviera’s Best-Kept Secret

💰 Approximate daily budget: £25–£45

If you haven’t been to Albania yet, you are genuinely missing out on one of Europe’s most exciting travel destinations. For years this small Balkan nation flew completely under the radar, and whilst the word is slowly getting out, it remains delightfully uncrowded and extraordinarily affordable.

The Albanian Riviera stretches along the Ionian Sea with waters so brilliantly turquoise you’ll be convinced someone’s edited the photos, except they haven’t. Beach towns like Ksamil and Himara offer pristine stretches of coast without the eye-watering price tags you’d find in Greece or Croatia just across the water. A decent meal at a local restaurant? You’re looking at £5–£8. A cold craft beer by the sea? Often under £2.

Beyond the beaches, the ancient city of Gjirokastër is a UNESCO-listed gem of Ottoman architecture tumbling down a mountainside, while the capital Tirana surprises with colourful street art, buzzing café culture, and a burgeoning food scene. The Accursed Mountains in the north offer some of the most dramatic alpine hiking in the Balkans, largely trail-free and gloriously unspoilt.

🗺 Traveller’s Tip: Most nationalities can enter Albania visa-free. The local currency is the Albanian Lek (ALL), and cash is still king in smaller towns, so come prepared. English is widely spoken in tourist areas.


2. Bosnia & Herzegovina: Where East Meets West Over Coffee

💰 Approximate daily budget: £20–£40

Bosnia & Herzegovina is one of those countries that gets under your skin and simply refuses to let go. Its complex history, extraordinary landscapes, and the warmest hospitality in the Balkans combine to create a travel experience that is deeply moving and utterly memorable — without costing the earth.

Sarajevo is the star of the show: a city where Ottoman mosques, Austro-Hungarian architecture, and socialist-era buildings sit side by side as a living testament to centuries of layered history. The famous Baščaršija bazaar is the heart of the old town, where you can sip a proper Bosnian coffee — thick, strong, and served with Turkish delight, for mere pennies and watch the world go by. A full three-course dinner at a traditional restaurant rarely exceeds £10.

Then there’s Mostar, with its iconic Stari Most bridge arching gracefully over the emerald-green Neretva River — one of the most photographed scenes in the Balkans, and rightly so. The countryside beyond the cities is equally spectacular: the waterfalls at Kravica, the river canyons of Neretva, and the medieval fortress town of Počitelj all reward those willing to explore.

🗺 Traveller’s Tip: The Convertible Marka (BAM) is pegged to the Euro at a fixed rate, making budgeting straightforward. Intercity buses are cheap and reliable. Don’t miss a traditional Bosnian breakfast of pita bread with kajmak (clotted cream) — it’ll cost you next to nothing and set you up beautifully for the day.


3. Georgia: Ancient Kingdoms, Infinite Wine & Staggering Mountains

💰 Approximate daily budget: £25–£50

Technically sitting at the crossroads of Europe and Asia, Georgia is undeniably European in culture and soul, and it offers some of the most jaw-dropping scenery, most distinctive cuisine, and most generous hospitality you’ll find anywhere on the continent, at prices that feel almost implausibly low.

The capital Tbilisi is a revelation: a glorious tangle of crumbling balconied houses, ancient churches, Soviet-era architecture, and cool wine bars all piled together on the banks of the Mtkvari River. The Old Town’s cobbled lanes are perfect for wandering, and the food scene is absolutely magnificent. Georgian cuisine is one of the great unsung culinary traditions of the world, the cheesy bread khachapuri, the walnut-stuffed dumplings called khinkali, and the extraordinary array of vegetable dishes will have you eating extremely well for very little.

Wine lovers should know that Georgia is widely considered the birthplace of wine, with an 8,000-year-old winemaking tradition. The Kakheti region produces wonderful natural wines, and a full bottle from a local producer can cost as little as £3–£5. Beyond the cities, the Caucasus Mountains offer world-class trekking, medieval monasteries perched on cliffsides, and ancient cave cities that feel plucked straight from another era.

🗺 Traveller’s Tip: Most European and British passport holders can stay in Georgia visa-free for up to 365 days — yes, a whole year. The Georgian Lari (GEL) goes a very long way. Marshrutky (shared minibuses) connect cities cheaply, and Tbilisi has a fantastic, inexpensive metro system.


4. North Macedonia: Byzantine Beauty on a Shoestring

💰 Approximate daily budget: £20–£38

Tiny, landlocked, and frequently overlooked on European itineraries, North Macedonia is a genuinely fantastic destination for the curious budget traveller. It offers ancient history, beautiful lakes, and a fascinating cultural mix, all at prices that are amongst the lowest on the continent.

Ohrid, on the shores of the vast Lake Ohrid, one of Europe’s oldest and deepest lakes, is the undisputed highlight. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, it’s a stunning town of Byzantine churches, Roman amphitheatres, and medieval fortresses tumbling down to glittering water that shifts between deep blue and luminous green depending on the light. Accommodation here is excellent value, and the local speciality, Ohrid trout, is both delicious and remarkably cheap.

The capital Skopje is a curious and entertaining mix of ancient Ottoman bazaars and extravagant neoclassical statues, the result of a somewhat controversial 2010s urban renewal project that gives the city a uniquely theatrical character. The Old Bazaar (Čaršija) is one of the finest in the Balkans: full of craftsmen, teahouses, and mosques that have barely changed in centuries. Eating out here is excellent value, a hearty Macedonian meal with a carafe of local wine rarely tops £10.

🗺 Traveller’s Tip: The Macedonian Denar (MKD) is the local currency. North Macedonia is an EU candidate country but not yet a member, so it remains outside the Eurozone. Tipping around 10% is appreciated but not obligatory. The country is very compact, making it easy to see a great deal in just a few days.


5. Bulgaria: Mountains, Monasteries & Magnificent Value

💰 Approximate daily budget: £28–£50

Bulgaria is the EU’s most affordable member state, and whilst it’s better known than some of the other entries on this list, it remains wildly underrated as a tourist destination. Beyond the stag-do crowds of Sunny Beach lies a country of extraordinary beauty, deep history, and endlessly surprising experiences.

Sofia, the capital, is a delight: a cosmopolitan city with an exceptional café culture, wonderful museums, and a remarkable collection of ancient monuments, from Thracian tombs to Roman ruins to Byzantine churches, all tucked in between the city’s streets. The nearby Vitosha Mountain means you can hike above the clouds in the morning and be back in a lively city bar by evening. Excellent coffee and a pastry in Sofia? Under £2. A proper restaurant dinner? Rarely more than £10–£12.

The Rhodope Mountains in the south are magical, deep gorges, medieval Plovdiv (widely regarded as one of Europe’s most beautiful cities), and tiny villages where time moves at a gentle pace. In winter, ski resorts like Bansko and Borovets offer slopes comparable to Western European resorts at a fraction of the price. The Black Sea coast, meanwhile, provides a beach holiday alternative to the Greek or Turkish Riviera, with resorts ranging from the lively (Nessebar, another UNESCO site) to the blissfully quiet.

🗺 Traveller’s Tip: Bulgaria uses the Bulgarian Lev (BGN), which is pegged to the Euro. As an EU member, travel from the UK to Bulgaria is straightforward. Public transport is inexpensive and efficient between major cities. If you’re hiring a car, fuel prices are amongst the lowest in Europe.


Final Thoughts: Budget Travel Doesn’t Mean Compromising

There’s a common misconception that budget travel means compromising on quality or experience. These five destinations prove the opposite. Albania’s Riviera rivals anything on the Adriatic. Bosnia’s mountain cuisine rivals anything in the broader region. Georgia’s wine culture rivals France in passion if not in fame. North Macedonia’s Byzantine churches are as breathtaking as those in Greece. And Bulgaria’s skiing is as good as Austria’s for half the cost.

The only thing you might miss out on is the crowds, and somehow, we don’t think you’ll mind that one bit.

So whether you’re planning a solo adventure, a romantic escape, or a family holiday that won’t require remortgaging the house, these affordable European destinations are waiting for you. Pack light, wander freely, and remember: the best paths are always the ones less travelled. Ready to start planning your next adventure? Browse our full collection of great value trips and hidden gem destinations – your next unforgettable trip might be just one click away!


Have you visited any of these budget-friendly European countries? And if you found this guide useful, don’t forget to share it with a fellow travel lover.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Europe on a Budget: Incredible Destinations That Won’t Break the Bank appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/europe-on-a-budget/