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  2. Jessica Nabongo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessica_Nabongo

    Jessica Nambowa Damarie Nassaka Nabongo is a Ugandan-American travel blogger and author who gained public attention in 2019 after having visited every country in the world. [1] [2] Her assertion she was the first Black woman to have done so was disputed. [3]

  3. Myrna Manzanares - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myrna_Manzanares

    Myrna Kaye Manzanares MBE (30 October 1946 – 21 December 2021) was a Belizean writer and activist, considered an ambassador of Belizean Creole culture. She worked to preserve this culture, particularly the Creole language, and advocated for racial justice both in Belize and among its diaspora.

  4. Lexie Alford - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexie_Alford

    Alexis Rose Alford (born April 10, 1998), also known as Lexie Limitless, is an American adventure traveller and YouTuber who is notable for traveling to 195 countries before reaching the age of twenty-two.

  5. Fanny Bullock Workman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanny_Bullock_Workman

    Fanny wrote the majority of these travel books herself, and in them she commented extensively on the plight of women wherever she traveled. [ 15 ] [ 26 ] Stephanie Tingley writes, in her encyclopedia entry on Workman's travel writing, that there is an implied feminist criticism of the hardships women experienced and the inferior status of the ...

  6. Emily Hiestand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emily_Hiestand

    The Very Rich Hours: Travels in Orkney, Belize, the Everglades and Greece. Beacon Press. 1993. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-8070-7117-5. Emily Hiestand poet. Angela the Upside Down Girl: And Other Domestic Travels. Beacon Press. 1998. ISBN 978-0-8070-7128-1.

  7. All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_God's_Children_Need...

    Angelou continues the travel motif in Traveling Shoes, as evidenced in the book's title, [11] but her primary motivation in living in Africa, as she told interviewer George Plimpton, was "trying to get home". [3] Angelou relates her own journey of an African American woman searching for a home, an important word throughout Traveling Shoes.

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