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Travels with Charley in Search of America

John Steinbeck, Gary Sinise, et al.

4.6 on Amazon

2 HN comments

Arnold: The Education of a Bodybuilder

Arnold Schwarzenegger

4.7 on Amazon

2 HN comments

The Endurance: Shackleton's Legendary Antarctic Expedition

Caroline Alexander

4.8 on Amazon

2 HN comments

Dead Mountain: The Untold True Story of the Dyatlov Pass Incident (Historical Nonfiction Bestseller, True Story Book of Survival)

Donnie Eichar

4.5 on Amazon

2 HN comments

Airplane Flying Handbook: FAA-H-8083-3B

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)

4.5 on Amazon

2 HN comments

The Genius of Birds

Jennifer Ackerman

4.7 on Amazon

2 HN comments

Overcoming Gravity: A Systematic Approach to Gymnastics and Bodyweight Strength (Second Edition)

Steven Low

4.8 on Amazon

2 HN comments

The Emerald Mile: The Epic Story of the Fastest Ride in History Through the Heart of the Grand Canyon

Kevin Fedarko

4.8 on Amazon

2 HN comments

American Buffalo: In Search of a Lost Icon

Steven Rinella and Random House Audio

4.9 on Amazon

2 HN comments

Mountaineering: The Freedom of the Hills

The Mountaineers

4.9 on Amazon

2 HN comments

The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century

Kirk Wallace Johnson

4.5 on Amazon

2 HN comments

The Annapolis Book of Seamanship: Fourth Edition

John Rousmaniere and Mark Smith

4.8 on Amazon

2 HN comments

The Daring Book for Girls

Andrea J Buchanan and Miriam Peskowitz

4.7 on Amazon

2 HN comments

Every Shot Counts: Using the Revolutionary Strokes Gained Approach to Improve Your Golf Performance and Strategy

Mark Broadie

4.4 on Amazon

2 HN comments

The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative

Florence Williams

4.6 on Amazon

2 HN comments

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ssullyonNov 9, 2016

For those interested in this, check out Travels with Charley in Search of America by John Steinbeck. It was written in 1962, but I think it holds up well.

An aged Steinbeck feels out of touch with a country he is famous for writing about. To aid this, he travels across the country with his dog to see the America and it's people he has grown away from. He specifically avoids major highways and roads for the reasons people list here.

st31nawayonJune 24, 2020

It's funny, I was thinking about this recently while reading a (slightly embellished) John Steinbeck memoir called Travels with Charley: in Search of America.

He wrote it when he decided to take a nationwide road trip in the early '60s, and it captured a lot of interesting anecdotes about the birth of modern American lifestyles.

One of those was Steinbeck's fascination with "mobile homes", which are the pre-fab houses that you see in trailer parks. When he took his road trip, they were starting to get popular with factory workers. If/when a town's factories shut down, the workers could easily move their homes to where there was work, and he mentioned seeing a lot of them being moved along the highways.

But you don't see that very much these days. It seems like people prefer to stay where they are and demand or wait for the work to come back to them, even when they live in mobile housing.

There's a lot to be said about the value of a community, but I think this sort of stagnation reflects a precipitous decline in the US' appetite for all sorts of risk over the past few decades. Look at how children are raised, at how strangers are treated, at how slowly new developments proceed.

I dunno. It's hard to argue against conservativism in these sorts of situations, because nobody wants to see more child abductions or worksite accidents. But it's hard to deny that we've collectively lost "It", or whatever you want to call that drive to create a city on a hill to provide a beacon of hope and improve humanity's general wellbeing.

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