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The Family Sabbatical Handbook: The Budget Guide To Living Abroad With Your Family

The Family Sabbatical Handbook: The Budget Guide To Living Abroad With Your Family
By Elisa Bernick

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The budget guide to living on the road with your family

Product Description

What's it like living in another country? People have been fascinated by the topic for millennia, accounting for best sellers from Herodotus to Mayle and Mayes. While many readers are satisfied with a vicarious experience, a growing number want to live it for themselves. Elisa Bernick offers readers the book she wished she'd had when she and her husband and children were planning their 18-month family sabbatical.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #125284 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-04-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 314 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
...an entertaining and resourceful guide to extended travel with your children. -- SabbaticalHomes.com Newsletter: Issue 1

Helps families make dreams into reality...Filled with specifics and enfolded in humor...In for a `ride' you won't forget. -- Offbeat Travel

A wonderful book, very well written, and shows many aspects of the family sabbatical. -- Family McCarthy Blog, 6/22/08

Bernick's writing style makes readers feel they're getting advice from a good friend...includes an excellent annotated list of resources. -- Louise Feldmann, Library Journal

Filled with specifics and enfolded in humor...this book will make you start dreaming and that can be dangerous! -- Jane E. Meckwood-Yazdpour, Armchair Travel column, OffbeatTravel.com, September 10, 2007

For anyone about to go abroad with children, this account touches all the bases before the real game begins. -- J.D. Brown and Margaret Backenheimer, Chicago Tribune's Resourceful Traveler, August 19, 2007

Gives practical advice so that you, too, can have an odyssey with your children. -- Teresa Plowright, Travel with Kids guide, About.com, August 20, 2007

Practical information for planning and preparation...[and] description of feelings and family dynamics (how to get through rough spots). -- Reference & Research Book News, November 2007

This is a great book...I highly recommend it. -- Sandy Dhuyvetter, Host of Travel Talk Radio, 9/23/07

With this...title..., you'd be a fool not to grab your loved ones and soar for the horizon. Highly recommended. -- Mary Kearl & Nia Ferguson, Family Travel Forum, November 2007

From the Publisher
Silver Award in the Family & Relationships category of ForeWord magazine's 2007 Book of the Year Awards

From the Back Cover
TAKE A BREAK. EXPLORE THE WORLD. DISCOVER YOUR FAMILY. For generations, the academic world has embraced the idea of the sabbatical, an extended period of time off during which scholars are free from the responsibilities of teaching and work, free to travel, free to indulge their curiosity, free to recharge their creative batteries. Families deserve a similar break, and a growing number are taking it. NOW IT'S YOUR TURN! We leased our house and used the monthly income, along with savings, to live without working for 18 months abroad with our kids. We didn't know a soul in the city we moved to. We couldn't speak the language. We weren't sure our money would last. And we'd never traveled with our children for longer than a two-week vacation. But we decided to leave everything else up to chance and see where the adventure took us. Quite honestly, it's one of the best decisions our family ever made.-Elisa Bernick, author of The Family Sabbatical Handbook

LET ELISA AND 15 OTHER FAMILIES WHO LIVED IN EUROPE, CHINA, AND SOUTH AMERICA SHOW YOU . . . The ten most important reasons to live abroad with your kids. Why this is a realistic goal, not just a dream. How to meet the psychological and financial challenges and win! How to arrange schooling, find housing, and learn the language. How to negotiate your reentry into the world you left behind.

This is not only an excellent handbook; it's also an affecting story of the rewards that accrue to parents with the imagination and courage to change their lives as well as the lives of their children. Perhaps forever.-Rudy Maxa, Contributing Editor, National Geographic Traveler, and star of the PBS series Smart Travels

If there is anything about living abroad with children that Bernick hasn't covered, I certainly didn't find it.-Janice Macdonald, author and travel writer

Every American parent should read this book.-Dan Buettner, explorer, travel journalist, and founder of Quest Network


Customer Reviews

Not at all what it is billed to be if you take the title and dust-jacket seriously2
Perhaps I took too seriously the book's cover and title. Bills itself as "explore the world," "Let ... 15 ... families who lived in Europe, China, and South America show you ..."

But the proper title and the proper cover blurbs ought read: Wanna live in an impoverished third world country? You can! Or, perhaps, "How you and your children can live in impoverished Mexico." There is not one word about China or Europe in the book.

Perhaps a better title might be: "Living in Mexico for a year-and-a-half on $35,000 savings, with tips for having fun with your young children"

Here's what I get from the book: Step 1: don't buy a new car and save like heck for a few years until you've saved $35,000. Step 2: ask your young children's teachers what they should cover during their year living in Mexico (the book is solely about Mexico); Step 3: rent your house while you're gone; Step 4: play with your children and anticipate that they will need your love and support during the first few months in a third world country where they don't know anyone or the language; Step 5: learn the language while you live there, and have fun; but don't expect the telephone to work. There's an oddly unfinished story about how the author's friends pestered phone company authorities to get service restored. We learn only that the person at the phone company who said she would help left town for a two week vacation. Did they eventually get their phone service restored? We never find out. Instead, there's a sentence about how bribing a policeman in a corrupt country 100 pesos can get you out of a parking ticket. Just what one is supposed to do with these anecdotes is unclear.

Since I'd believed the title and the book's cover honest, I was enormously disappointed to find no words about how to live in Europe--where England costs about 4 times the U.S. (after factoring in exchange rates and actual cost of living in much of the country). The rest of Europe is also dear these days with the Euro at near-all-time highs. And, as mentioned, there's not a word on China.

Please re-title and re-blurb this book. Living in a third world/developing country/Mexico is, compared to U.S. living, affordable, and one should nurture and love one's children, but I simply must disagree with the others who have reviewed this book. Proceed with caution.

Very detailed, informative book5
I was so happy to find this book as I was planning a sabbatical from my university to teach overseas in a developing country with my family. The book is amazingly detailed, and provides lots of great lists that I am comparing with my own lists. The discussion about the benefits about taking the kids abroad is fantastic! I really appreciate the details that the author provides, and the story of their family's extended stay in Mexico. While this book is the best one I've found, it very much is geared toward adults who are planning on taking a complete sabbatical - not people working, volunteering, etc. overseas. The book talks about difficulties in meeting locals, boredom, the excessive socializing with ex-pats, etc. I think a lot of that can be resolved by choosing specifically where you go (perhaps not going to a place with a huge ex-pat community) and giving back to the communities you are living in through working or volunteering with local organizations. A sabbatical doesn't simply need to mean a year of rest - but can also mean a year's break from one's routine. This book is an excellent resource and a delightful read, but the options of a sabbatical year can really be thought of much more broadly than it is portrayed.

Not just for families!5
This amazing book is the inspirational tale of a family and their wonderful, challenging and oh-so-rewarding adventure in Mexico AND it's chock full of practical information that will make going abroad to live much easier and more enjoyable. Given the title, you might think this book is only for families--not so. It's a great resource for anyone planning to live abroad for any reason. And, while Bernick and her family lived in Mexico for more than a year, this book is invaluable even for a relatively short stay. My work took me to South America for 6 months (I went sans family) but the "Family Sabbatical Handbook" was the best source of advice/resources/inspiration I found. It saved me time in preparation and many costly mistakes. Buy it!!! Even if you're not sure you want to live abroad, buy it to be inspired to do something truly life-changing. And, if you've already decided to take the plunge, buy it for Bernick's terrific "to-do lists" complete with timetables right down to departure day.