Lucinda: Interesting story. So we’ll written. It’s very dated and some of the attitudes are off putting now in 2023. So I read half way through and felt done
United States on Sep 04, 2023
lostlobo: Ein gefeierter, aber gesundheitlich angeschlagener Autor, der es noch einmal wissen will. Ein liebenswerter Pudel, der „Ftt“ sagen kann, als Reisebegleiter. Ein Truck mit dem gewissen Etwas. Frühe Erkenntnisse über das Unwesen der Jagd, die Umweltzerstörung, das grenzenlose Wachstum. Konfrontation mit dem Rassismus. Die Majestät der Sequoias. Avalon in Neuengland. Eine fast magische Begegnung mit zwei Kojoten der Mojave. Ein Buch der Extraklasse.
John Steinbeck – kaum ein Name steht so für amerikanische Literatur mit sozialem Gewissen wie seiner. „Von Mäusen und Menschen“ (1937) oder „Früchte des Zorns“ (1939) – beide über die Schicksale von Wanderarbeitern – legen davon Zeugnis ab. Für zweiteres Werk erhielt er 1940 den Pulitzer Preis. 1962 wurde sein Gesamtwerk mit dem Literaturnobelpreis ausgezeichnet. Im selben Jahr erschien „Travels with Charley: In Search of America“ – mein Favorit aus Steinbecks Feder.
1960, im politisch richtungsweisenden Wahljahr JFK vs. Richard Nixon, beschloss Steinbeck sich auf die Reise durch sein riesiges Heimatland zu machen, coast to coast, New York to California and back. Er hatte das Gefühl, als...
Germany on Aug 18, 2023
Rick: Having grown up in the south during the late sixties and early seventies, I was part of the journey and the beginning of the "after" that Steinbeck dreaded and could not fathom. It is eye-opening to feel the naivety of his sheltered perspective, but helps me understand why those who were not in close contact with African-Americans took even longer to come to grips with their own racism.
United States on Aug 14, 2023
david canford: In 1960 John Steinback decides he wants to see what’s happening in America and whether it has changed, so with his dog Charley and a truck fitted out to live in they set off from the North East. Being Steinbeck there’s some good writing but by the time they reached the mid West I was bored and underwhelmed and put it down for a while. I’m glad I went back to it since after that it improved hugely as he went west and eventually to his youthful stomping ground in California and then Texas and the South. It seems the nation was sharply divided even then - he recounts family rows about his support for JFK, his sisters were supporting Nixon in the 1960 election. If you’re looking for another good read about America during that era, I would recommend Jan Morris’ Coast to Coast, and even though her prose can sometimes be too much I loved the way it seemed to capture what some looking back now consider America’s golden age, providing of course you were white
United Kingdom on Aug 13, 2023
kaydubkaydub: It’s the classic Steinbeck novel “Travel’s with Charley” in an e book, except this particular copy was clearly made by scanning a physical copy and then running a text recognition algorithm, with less than perfect results. The most common mistake was mistaking “tl” for the letter “d”. “Restless” becomes “resdess”, “bottles” becomes “botdes”. It’s not universal but it is frequent enough. The other mistake was new paragraphs started at random in the middle of sentences. It’s a bit distracting but not so bad as to affect overall enjoyment. For $1.50 or whatever insignificant amount I paid it’s good value.
Canada on Dec 16, 2022
Rick Clark: One of the bad things in our educational system when I was 16 was how our high school system presented English literature to students. We were told what to read and how to respond. I was fortunate in having access to a broad based book collection at my home and one of the books was "Travels With Charlie". I had the joy and pleasure reading this wonderful story a year or so before having it "force fed" to me at high school so was able to look beyond the teacher's ramblings and concentrate on the author's journey across part of homeland and his journey through and about himself.
I read at a slow pace by some folks standards. This is not brought about by disability but by my imagination. Love of words,phrases,sentences and John Steinbeck feeds my mind.
"Travels" is part biography,part travel log,part drama. The author,a Nobel prize winner,was,as it is sometimes called,in his golden years when he wrote this book.I hate that phrase and I'm pretty sure he did too. He writes with the maturity of knowing but also with the curiosity of someone still looking. Obviously everyone should read and own this book. Re-read like I did but don't wait too long like I did. Enjoy.
Canada on Apr 03, 2022
Tthomas: John Steinbeck, a Nobel prize winner, decided in 1960 that he could no longer continue writing books about the country, before he went out to see the whole thing for himself. He then decided that he would complete a ten thousand mile long journey across the United States in search of rediscovering America. In order to complete this journey Steinbeck decided to build a camper van to make sure that his journey would remain comfortable and run smoothly. He named his van named Rocinante after an author that he admires. Steinbeck would have to leave the safe comfort of his home and the environment that he is used to. He was able to complete the journey with his trustee poodle Charley. They encountered several obstacles along the way but they together were able to overcome the challenges that were presented before them.
In the beginning, Steinbeck didn’t necessarily set out with the intention of publishing his journey across the United States. His original plan was to simply take notes over what he had seen and maybe write about it in the future. In the very beginning of the book, there was a little boy who used to live across the street. He wanted nothing more than to accompany...
United States on Apr 12, 2019
John P. Jones III: I first read “Travels…” in 1962. It is #15 on my list of books that I’ve read, which I commenced in that year. I’ve read a number of other books by Steinbeck, including The Grapes of Wrath , which I’ve read twice. Figured a re-read of “Travels…” was long overdue, since my original reading proved to be the impetus to my pale imitation of Steinbeck’s trip, in August 1968. I took my VW bug, and traveled from Pittsburgh, west, through Wisconsin, and all the way to Montana, before turning south to New Mexico, then looping back home in a rush imposed by “Uncle Sam.” That trip was the commencement to some other serious wanderings during my life.
Steinbeck’s trip was much more extensive, yet in the end, attenuated also. It spanned 11 weeks, in the fall of 1960. He left his home on Long Island, NY, and traveled east and north, to Aroostook, Co. Maine, before turning west and going all the way to Seattle. Then he turned south and traveled to his childhood hometowns of Salinas and Monterey CA. Steinbeck references Thomas Wolfe’s classic You Can't Go Home Again several times, noting that after a certain age many of your old friends are...
United States on May 28, 2018
K N Keerthi Bhushan: This books is another example of the mesmerizing beauty and lucidity of John Steinbeck's prose.
One one hand the narrative is a little loosely chronological and on the other it is also one in which is captured a gradual and strictly sequential (and natural) opening up of the narrator's experiences, revelations, unshackling of biases and forming of new ones.
To me it is an important technical achievement of the narrative: to combine the stream of consciousness with the traditional expectations a travelogue.
It is hard to imagine that the writer set out to structure it as such for the sheer force of spontaneity masks the basic writing effort itself. Even in places where the narrator appears lost, the effort of writing is overshadowed by the honest intimidation John Steinbeck suffers at the hands of the monstrous machines of modernity.
The undercurrent of craving for freedom - probably from the unknown burden called life - becomes a metaphor of the inherent limitation of language to express fully the experience, unknown fears, hesitations, even in the hands of such a master as John Steinbeck. This tension is palpable to the extent that the reader may feel uneasy at places...
India on Jul 29, 2013
John Steinbeck's "Travels with Charley: A Journey in Search of America" | Dean Nicholson's Incredible Journey: How One Man and His Rescue Cat Pedaled Around the World - Hardcover | Alex Lasker's Novel, The Memory of an Elephant | |
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B2B Rating |
93
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99
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97
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Sale off | $1 OFF | $12 OFF | |
Total Reviews | 123 reviews | 1 reviews | 109 reviews |
Author Biographies | Author Biographies | ||
ISBN-13 | 978-0140053203 | 978-1538718780 | 979-8520123804 |
Best Sellers Rank | #9 in Travelogues & Travel Essays#11 in Traveler & Explorer Biographies#11 in Author Biographies | #90 in Animal & Pet Care Essays#416 in Traveler & Explorer Biographies#3,252 in Memoirs | #25 in Travelogues & Travel Essays#397 in Coming of Age Fiction #1,354 in Literary Fiction |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No | ||
ISBN-10 | 0140053204 | 1538718782 | |
Publication date | January 31, 1980 | September 29, 2020 | July 5, 2021 |
Product Dimensions | 7.4 x 4.2 x 0.9 inches; 6.4 Ounces | 5.88 x 1 x 8.5 inches; 14.4 Ounces | 6 x 0.56 x 9 inches; 11.68 Ounces |
Language | English | English | English |
Country of Origin | USA | USA | USA |
Customer Reviews | 4.5/5 stars of 8,316 ratings | 4.9/5 stars of 6,898 ratings | 4.7/5 stars of 3,483 ratings |
Release date | January 31, 1980 | September 29, 2020 | July 5, 2021 |
Traveler & Explorer Biographies | Traveler & Explorer Biographies | Traveler & Explorer Biographies | |
Travelogues & Travel Essays | Travelogues & Travel Essays | Travelogues & Travel Essays | |
Publisher | Penguin Books; F edition | Grand Central Publishing; Illustrated edition | Independently published |
Bonita H.: When I was I was in high school, my English teacher assigned John Steinbeck’s The Moon is Down to me for a book report. I was hooked. He remains one of my favorite authors. Thank you Miss Walker.
United States on Sep 20, 2023