Jean Harkin's Blog - Posts Tagged "the-long-haul"
Escape from Chaos via Book Travels
Like everyone else, I’ve tried to escape from our troubled, chaotic year. Books have been a great pathway out. Coincidentally, the last two books I’ve read (and reviewed here on Goodreads) involved travel on the road.
“Driving Mr. Albert: A Trip Across America with Einstein’s Brain” by Michael Paterniti (2001) is a memoir by a young man who followed up on a fascinating lead—to meet the pathologist who had absconded the Princeton, New Jersey, medical center with Albert Einstein’s brain after he died in 1955 and kept it for forty years. Young Paterniti became the road trip driver for elderly Dr. Harvey, who then wished, near the end of his life, to return the brain to Einstein’s daughter in California. The book details this cross-country adventure with humor and insight.
“The Long Haul: a Trucker’s Tales of Life on the Road” by Finn Murphy (2018) is the memoir of a truck driver who contracted for long-distance moving companies for over thirty years. His narrative reveals the inside story of the truck-driving lifestyle, hard work, and relationships forged on the job. Murphy’s observations of the private lives of “shippers” (moving company customers) reveals much about ordinary and extraordinary human lives in America. His tales could not have been made up!
From this helpful navigator, I also learned some tips about packing, moving, saving stuff—and how to keep safe driving on the highway alongside trucks.
Besides reading, I went on a writing journey, contributing poetry and helping to edit The Writers’ Mill’s eighth annual anthology. The title is “Journeys Through Chaos: an Anthology to Bring us Together.” The challenges of this pandemic, political, and fire-devastated year inspired much of the journal’s contents. But there is also humor and some writings inspired by personal struggles and hardships.
The anthology will be uniquely published during the Writers’ Mill group’s November meeting. This publication will be our fourth “in meeting” upload, but our first to publish via Zoom. Leader Sheila Deeth will direct our efforts from final formatting, to cover design, to setting the purchase price, as the group participates through Zoom, hosted by our local librarian.
The Writers’ Mill 2020 collection will be available for purchase online soon after November 15 at a price likely under $9. Be sure to look for the colorful cover on Amazon and take a peek inside at an enticing blend of fiction, essays, and poetry. Profits from sales will go to the Cedar Mill Library in Washington County, Oregon.
“Driving Mr. Albert: A Trip Across America with Einstein’s Brain” by Michael Paterniti (2001) is a memoir by a young man who followed up on a fascinating lead—to meet the pathologist who had absconded the Princeton, New Jersey, medical center with Albert Einstein’s brain after he died in 1955 and kept it for forty years. Young Paterniti became the road trip driver for elderly Dr. Harvey, who then wished, near the end of his life, to return the brain to Einstein’s daughter in California. The book details this cross-country adventure with humor and insight.
“The Long Haul: a Trucker’s Tales of Life on the Road” by Finn Murphy (2018) is the memoir of a truck driver who contracted for long-distance moving companies for over thirty years. His narrative reveals the inside story of the truck-driving lifestyle, hard work, and relationships forged on the job. Murphy’s observations of the private lives of “shippers” (moving company customers) reveals much about ordinary and extraordinary human lives in America. His tales could not have been made up!
From this helpful navigator, I also learned some tips about packing, moving, saving stuff—and how to keep safe driving on the highway alongside trucks.
Besides reading, I went on a writing journey, contributing poetry and helping to edit The Writers’ Mill’s eighth annual anthology. The title is “Journeys Through Chaos: an Anthology to Bring us Together.” The challenges of this pandemic, political, and fire-devastated year inspired much of the journal’s contents. But there is also humor and some writings inspired by personal struggles and hardships.
The anthology will be uniquely published during the Writers’ Mill group’s November meeting. This publication will be our fourth “in meeting” upload, but our first to publish via Zoom. Leader Sheila Deeth will direct our efforts from final formatting, to cover design, to setting the purchase price, as the group participates through Zoom, hosted by our local librarian.
The Writers’ Mill 2020 collection will be available for purchase online soon after November 15 at a price likely under $9. Be sure to look for the colorful cover on Amazon and take a peek inside at an enticing blend of fiction, essays, and poetry. Profits from sales will go to the Cedar Mill Library in Washington County, Oregon.
Published on November 08, 2020 11:01
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Tags:
albert-einstein, cedar-mill-library, driving-mr-albert, finn-murphy, journeys-through-chaos, michael-paterniti, sheila-deeth, the-long-haul, the-writers-mill
On the Road Again--with Harry and John
Escaping from the cloister of pandemic, I enjoyed two more road trips through books (two in previous blog.) Recently I traveled with President Harry Truman and his wife Bess in his 1953 Chrysler from Independence, Missouri to Washington DC, New York, and Philadelphia.
Next, I rode in a souped-up camper/pickup with John Steinbeck and his French poodle, Charley, from New York across the northern half of the USA, then down to California before following a route through Texas and the South, back to their New York home.
“Harry Truman’s Excellent Adventure: The True Story of a Great American Road Trip” by Matthew Algeo tails the Trumans on their road trip back to DC three years after Harry left the White House. He loved to travel, loved cars, and he and Bess wanted to travel like private citizens on a road trip with Harry driving his new car. He was the last ex-president to try such a stunt, and probably the first and only. Indeed, it was an adventure, well explored, researched, and written with down home humor by Algeo.
John Steinbeck wrote “Travels with Charley: In Search of America” in 1960, only seven years after the Trumans’ round trip. John’s purposes for his solo trip included 1) to prove he could after several troubling health issues—he was 58 years old, and 2) to explore the landscapes and gain new perspectives on the character of the American populace.
Charley was a companionable, reassuring presence for John, who could read the dog’s body language. They traveled well together, encountering a cross section of Americana and finding a diversity of unique individuals and some humorous adventures. It was interesting to read that in 1960, on the eve of a presidential election, the political chatter was subdued and discreet in contrast to 2020. The travelers found little discord in society until they were gobsmacked by “the naked face of racism” in the South.
If John had encountered Harry coming or going across the USA, he would have enjoyed a conversation full of political opinions and wry humor. And Harry would have found John to be a good listener, non-judgmental observer, concerned citizen, and an equal with a sense of humor.
Harry would have expounded on the upcoming Nixon-Kennedy presidential election. Harry was known to hate Nixon, so would have favored Kennedy despite antipathy for Kennedy’s overbearing father. And, loving cars, Harry would have been fascinated by John’s rigged-up conveniences in his specially designed camper topper “Rocinante.” Being an avid reader, Harry would have appreciated the camper bearing the name of Don Quixote’s horse in Cervantes’s picaresque adventure tale.
The two men could have settled comfortably in Rocinante and visited over a cup of coffee with a dash of whiskey while Charley napped and Bess went off to have her hair done in the next town. If Charley had words, he could have topped the conversation by snarling his opinion about bears in Yellowstone.
That makes four road trip/book adventures for me since last fall (all reviewed here on Goodreads.) I am open to suggestions for further road trips. Something in a foreign land, perhaps?
And once we all return to actually traveling again, you might like to take along an audiobook of a road trip. A Goodreads reader recommended Gary Sinise’s audiobook of “Travels with Charley,” noting that Sinise’s voice was a perfect fit for John Steinbeck.
From my November road trip, an audiobook is available of “The Long Haul: A Trucker’s Tales of Life on the Road” by Finn Murphy.
Next, I rode in a souped-up camper/pickup with John Steinbeck and his French poodle, Charley, from New York across the northern half of the USA, then down to California before following a route through Texas and the South, back to their New York home.
“Harry Truman’s Excellent Adventure: The True Story of a Great American Road Trip” by Matthew Algeo tails the Trumans on their road trip back to DC three years after Harry left the White House. He loved to travel, loved cars, and he and Bess wanted to travel like private citizens on a road trip with Harry driving his new car. He was the last ex-president to try such a stunt, and probably the first and only. Indeed, it was an adventure, well explored, researched, and written with down home humor by Algeo.
John Steinbeck wrote “Travels with Charley: In Search of America” in 1960, only seven years after the Trumans’ round trip. John’s purposes for his solo trip included 1) to prove he could after several troubling health issues—he was 58 years old, and 2) to explore the landscapes and gain new perspectives on the character of the American populace.
Charley was a companionable, reassuring presence for John, who could read the dog’s body language. They traveled well together, encountering a cross section of Americana and finding a diversity of unique individuals and some humorous adventures. It was interesting to read that in 1960, on the eve of a presidential election, the political chatter was subdued and discreet in contrast to 2020. The travelers found little discord in society until they were gobsmacked by “the naked face of racism” in the South.
If John had encountered Harry coming or going across the USA, he would have enjoyed a conversation full of political opinions and wry humor. And Harry would have found John to be a good listener, non-judgmental observer, concerned citizen, and an equal with a sense of humor.
Harry would have expounded on the upcoming Nixon-Kennedy presidential election. Harry was known to hate Nixon, so would have favored Kennedy despite antipathy for Kennedy’s overbearing father. And, loving cars, Harry would have been fascinated by John’s rigged-up conveniences in his specially designed camper topper “Rocinante.” Being an avid reader, Harry would have appreciated the camper bearing the name of Don Quixote’s horse in Cervantes’s picaresque adventure tale.
The two men could have settled comfortably in Rocinante and visited over a cup of coffee with a dash of whiskey while Charley napped and Bess went off to have her hair done in the next town. If Charley had words, he could have topped the conversation by snarling his opinion about bears in Yellowstone.
That makes four road trip/book adventures for me since last fall (all reviewed here on Goodreads.) I am open to suggestions for further road trips. Something in a foreign land, perhaps?
And once we all return to actually traveling again, you might like to take along an audiobook of a road trip. A Goodreads reader recommended Gary Sinise’s audiobook of “Travels with Charley,” noting that Sinise’s voice was a perfect fit for John Steinbeck.
From my November road trip, an audiobook is available of “The Long Haul: A Trucker’s Tales of Life on the Road” by Finn Murphy.
Published on February 25, 2021 20:34
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Tags:
bess-truman, cervantes, don-quixote, finn-murphy, french-poodle-charley, gary-sinise, harry-truman, john-steinbeck, matthew-algeo, nixon-kennedy-election, rocinante, the-long-haul, travels-with-charley


