As an avid reader of American history and any kind of roadtrip tale, this book about a cross-country journey married the two with a unique perspective on where we are as a nation. It occasionally has the educational feel of Ken Burns’ work, with the fun asides and light-hearted anecdotes that remind me of Bill Bryson out on the road.
There is a deep thoughtfulness in the writing, and you can almost hear Barry thinking as he speaks about the people and places he visits along his drive with his wife across the USA, from East to West and back again. The places and characters make you feel like you are there alongside them in their RV, and you come away feeling like you have a far greater appreciation of the foundations of our country than you did before. I vacillated often between optimism and pessimism as I read it.
There is much worthy history in the book, such that you get an understanding not only of what we are now, but how we got here. The journey to now as a nation is often deeply sad reading, but I came away knowing far more about the many pieces of our American story that are untold or otherwise willingly forgotten. I come back to the word perspective again, because one gets the sense that while we are in a tough jam now as a nation, we have surely made our way through tough ones before.
I am also envious of their roadtrip. It seems like the kind of thing one might only get to do in retirement, and yet they were able to seize the terrible season of COVID and make something wonderful and informative out of it. There were several times while reading it that I turned to my wife and said ‘We should do something like this.’ That usually indicates you’re in the middle of a great read.
Back Roads and Better Angels: A Journey into the Heart of American Democracy
4.8
| 58 ratingsPrice: 24.49
Last update: 09-04-2024