Fourth Edition ―Fully revised and updated with 30 new maps throughout.
Right down America's Main Street it rolled, pausing at each town along the way, then moving on, carrying travelers in search of adventure, romance, or that rare chance for a new beginning. Route 66 knew many the Mother Road, Will Rogers Highway, the Neon Road. And it lived up to each. Travelers met the land, found new friends―and often themselves. Now, more than a quarter-century since being officially abandoned, the old road still keeps its promise.
Today, all along the highway's 2,448-mile length from Chicago to L.A., signs carrying its magic double sixes once again give direction to the journey. Yes, they assure you, this is still Route 66. . . .
More than twenty years after the original publication of Route 66 , this completely updated and expanded guide will make the trip along the Mother Road easier and even more exciting. Responding to requests from readers and travelers, Tom Snyder offers up-to-date routings, elegant and easy-to-read new maps, and revised information on roadside attractions. Filled with love, high jinks, and mystery, the stories Snyder narrates truly capture the flavor of the Main Street of America. Cattle rustlers, gangsters, hitchhikers, and ghosts all make appearances in these nostalgic glimpses of history-in-the-making along America's most famous highway.
As the author notes in the intro, this book isn’t a picture book for the coffee table, it’s for the car to use as a quick reference when you’re cruising the ‘Mother Road’, Route 66. It’s divided into 2 parts, and each part is divided by state.
The first section is a travel guide, which gives you directions and mentions interesting sites. The maps are basic, but helpful. Again the author says get good maps for the whole route, these are just to get you started. It’s really helpful that he points out the ‘real’ route, which at times varies off what is now usually interstate highway, and at times is merely a gravel road.
The second section is a Roadside Companion, in which he relates quirky stories about the history of the road. The stories, while interesting, all seem to have something negative to say, as if to remind you that things weren’t always good in “the good ol’ days”.
We plan to be intersecting the ol’ road in a few places this summer, and will be using some of the information provided, can’t wait to get to get on the road.
This handbook is a good starter, I plan to look into other guides to fill out the rest of the story.
Note this is the 4th Edition, so if you pick one up say at a used bookstore, and you want the latest in the maps, try to get the latest edition.
This book is excellent. It's small enough to fit in my purse and is easy to navigate. I really LOVE the mileage chart in the back that shows Interstate mileage vs Route 66 mileage from one town to another. I expect this to be a great resource when I'm on the road.
I had planned to skip through this book and only read about the states that I plan to travel through but I ended up reading the whole book. You definitely CAN skip around though and just read the info that relates to your planned adventures.
My book was not an ebook as stated. It was a paperback. Having trouble fixing that on Goodreads.
A good overview, by segments, of Route 66 if you are traveling from east to west and don't care about exact mile markers. For Arizona travelers on Route 66 (in either direction) Route 66 Across Arizona is a much better choice.
This is ostensibly a travel guide, but I've always loved maps, atlases, and even geography texts. Weird, I know, but there it is. So I personally found this a book that not only explains the routes one has to follow to approximately trace old US66; it also made (for me) fascinating reading. Tom Snyder founded the US Route 66 Association, and has been instrumental in preserving as many segments of the old road as possible. Besides actual travel advice, it also is filled with interesting stories about the highway and some of its leading characters. I never got to take the tour, but I would do it if I could. I recommend it only to map aficionados like myself.
This is a handy little guide for planning a Route 66 road trip although this edition is a little dated. It's not nearly as comprehensive as some of the other guides.