
Before Herodotus, travel writing didn’t exist - nor did journalism. No-one had ever travelled anywhere with the sole intention of finding something out and writing it all down “so that human achievements may not become forgotten in time”. Travel writing was not so much a road less travelled, but a road never travelled at all. Not only did Herodotus change all that - but he set an extremely high benchmark for future writers of the genre, who are still struggling to beat his best-seller, The Histories.
There can be few books – the Bible is perhaps one – that have proven a more popular travelling companion than The Histories. Herodotus would have been a modern publisher’s dream, an ancient literary sensation akin to morphing Hemingway, Kapuscinski, Theroux and Palin (Michael, not Sarah...), and one who could generate sales (and arguably as much fiction) to rival Dan Brown.