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posted by CoolHand on Monday August 24 2015, @09:29PM   Printer-friendly
from the hobo-life dept.

When others get off the train to finally go home, Leonie Müller stays behind. That's because she already is home: The train is her apartment, and she says she likes it that way.

The German college student gave up her apartment in spring. "It all started with a dispute I had with my landlord," Müller told The Washington Post via e-mail. "I instantly decided I didn't want to live there anymore — and then I realized: Actually, I didn't want to live anywhere anymore."

Instead, she bought a subscription that allows her to board every train in the country for free. Now, Müller washes her hair in the train bathroom and writes her college papers while traveling at a speed of up to 190 mph. She says that she enjoys the liberty she has experienced since she gave up her apartment. "I really feel at home on trains, and can visit so many more friends and cities. It's like being on vacation all the time," Müller said.

Agatha Christie wrote a lot of her stories while travelling. DH Lawrence and Hemingway also. Would your work, creativity, and lifestyle mesh well with a life of permanent travel, like the girl from the article?


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  • (Score: 1) by Pino P on Tuesday August 25 2015, @04:30PM

    by Pino P (4721) on Tuesday August 25 2015, @04:30PM (#227659) Journal

    I may have found the only book that doesn't have a Wikipedia page, too.

    Can you find three to five independent reviews of the book in reliable sources? If so, cite them here and someone might get around to turning them into an article.

    If not, there's a reason that it lacks an article, and it's the same reason that books from vanity presses tend to lack articles: Wikipedia's verifiability policy [wikipedia.org]. It's impossible to create an article whose claims can be verified against sources if there are no sources to cite.