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Heat moon blue highways
Heat moon blue highways








heat moon blue highways

I know this feeling, having hitchhiked in numerous countries around the world. He confesses he feels lonely sometimes, yes, but at the same time the loneliness is glorious.

heat moon blue highways

He lets them talk freely and copiously about their lives and philosophies without interruptions or judgments.Īpart from a few days here and there when he stays with friends or people he has met and the occasional hitchhiker he picks up, Heat-Moon remains alone and goes his own way. In the small towns he passes through, he goes out of his way to find the most idiosyncratic residents. The most fascinating aspects of the book, however, are the long interviews he has with people he meets on the road. The author writes of life on the road and the unutterable loneliness that would sometimes overtake him. From New England he turns west again and goes back to Missouri. He then heads across Texas and Arizona, turns north through Nevada to Oregon, follows the north side of the Columbia River in Washington, turns north in Idaho and follows the Canadian border closely through Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, and so on.

heat moon blue highways

From there he swings southwest through the Deep South to Louisiana. Heat-Moon starts out from Missouri and heads east to North Carolina. The title of the book comes from his intention to avoid the interstates and stick to secondary roads, those that appear in blue on old paper maps. After a heartbreaking separation from his wife, the author takes off alone to tour the United States in a small camper van he names Ghost Dancing. It takes place in 1978, although it was not published until 1982. I’m surprised that I never read it before. This book is considered a classic in travel writing, particularly in the sub-genre of road memoirs.










Heat moon blue highways