In Photos: A Solo Road Trip Along Oman’s Remote Coastline

Photographs by Noa Avishag Schnall

Visual storyteller Noa Avishag Schnall chronicles her journey across the Arabic country in a powerful exploration of belonging for her new book, Homebound.

Noa Avishag Schnall’s debut book, Homebound, is both a travel memoir and a photographic account of a solo road trip across Oman, during which she slept each night in her car.

 

What begins as a post-quarantine release—an intrepid journey along the coastline and open landscapes of the southern Arabian Peninsula, a region tied to Schnall’s maternal lineage in Yemen—evolves into a deeply personal exploration. As she travels across Oman and encounters a spectrum of people and experiences, Schnall begins to see how closely the personal, familial, and political intertwine. Meetings with strangers spark family memories and meditations on the consequences of an absence of community and the evolving meaning of home.

 

In Homebound, every mile traveled deepens Schnall’s connection to her roots and becomes a powerful act of self-discovery. Her photography captures the lands, sands, and people of Oman, while her writing reveals a more intimate story of emotional landscapes and identities straddling past and present at every turn.

Editor’s Note: Homebound: A Memoir Traversing Oman by Noa Avishag Schnall is published by Twentyfour Thirtysix and is available to buy here.



Biome

Join our membership community. Support our work, receive a complimentary subscription to Atmos Magazine, and more.

Learn More

Return to Title Slide

In Photos: A Solo Road Trip Along Oman’s Remote Coastline

hero gallery image 1
hero gallery image 2
hero gallery image 3
hero gallery image 4
hero gallery image 5
hero gallery image 6
hero gallery image 7
hero gallery image 8
hero gallery image 9
hero gallery image 10
Return to Title Slide

In Photos: A Solo Road Trip Along Oman’s Remote Coastline

Newsletter