What People are Reading

I browsed my blog statistics and history to see what people have been reading on World Adventurers.  The blog has had over 295,000 hits since its inception in December 2004.  Although readership declined precipitously over the past couple of years after I neglected to update it frequently, the blog still received about 100 hits per week.  Most were archive searches on entries posted about Korea.  Readership has climbed a bit since I started posting again.

I blogged very little while I was in Paraguay; I’m back to blogging in Zambia but am not focusing much (yet) on topics related to Zambia or Africa.  Blogging here can be a hazardous endeavor.  A couple foreigners living in Zambia were scrutinized this year for what some of their postings.  It’s a shame but the reality here.  I will post some thoughts and insights on Zambia and Africa soon…after I determine what I can blog about without raising the ire of the Luddites.

Bible Collection

I have a collection of Bibles in different languages.  It’s an odd collection, I know, but there are two logical reasons for this collection.  The first is that it is a collection of the most widely published and translated work in the world.  No other literary work is available in so many languages.  I am a foreign language buff, so the Bible is a logical book to choose when collecting works in other languages.

The second purpose is that a Bible collection is a “living collection”; that is, I collect Bible translations when I find them and give a localized Bible to someone who can read it in that language and needs a copy.  Last year a Paraguayan friend saw that I had a copy of the Bible in Guarani and marveled that I had one because they weren’t readily available in Asuncion.  So I gave it to him and bought another one.  Whenever these books serve a greater purpose than collecting dust on a shelf, I am happy to give them away.  So far I’ve collected over 50 Bibles in different languages from around the world.  Yesterday I found four more in a Lusaka bookstore translated into different African languages, including Bemba, an indigenous language widely spoken in Zambia.  If I come across someone who needs one of them, it’s theirs to keep.  I’ll get another.

I also enjoy the challenge of finding Bibles in local languages wherever I travel.  I’ve been able to collect indigenous Bibles in virtually every country I’ve visited.  When I can’t find it locally, I buy one online.  The only Bible I haven’t found to date is an Egyptian Coptic Bible.  I didn’t have any luck finding one when I visited Egypt in 2001-02, and I couldn’t find it for purchase online.  Here in Zambia, the challenge will be to find the Bible translated into the countries’ seven major indigenous languages.  Yesterday I found Bibles in Bemba and Kaounde.  Two down, five to go.

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Testing Windows Live Writer

Microsoft launched a free software program called “Windows Live Writer” to make blogging more seamless.  So far, so good.  I like it.  Anything that will make blogging easier is welcome.  Coming from me, that’s a compliment, because as my cousin will attest I frequently criticize Microsoft for getting things wrong or “almost” right.  As long this program doesn’t lead me to post Twitter-size blog entries, then it will have accomplished its purpose.