The Longest Road, Philip Caputo
The Longest Road, Philip Caputo
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The Longest Road
Overland in Search of America, from Key West to the Arctic Ocean

Author: Philip Caputo

Narrator: Pete Larkin

Unabridged: 11 hr 50 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 07/16/2013


Synopsis

September 1996 found Philip Caputo on Barter Island, a wind-scoured rock in the Beaufort Sea populated by two hundred Inupiat and a handful of whites. As he gazed upon an American flag above the only school for a hundred and fifty miles, he marveled that the children in that school pledged allegiance to the same flag as the children of Cuban immigrants on Key West, almost six thousand miles away. Awed by America’s vastness and diversity and filled with a renewed appreciation for its cohesiveness, an idea began to form. With enough time, gas money, and nerve he could drive from the southernmost point to the northernmost point of the United States that is reachable by road, talking to people as he went and trying to better understand what holds our great country together.

Cicada-like, the idea went dormant, not to be reawakened for fourteen years. In 2011, America was struggling through the greatest economic downturn since the Depression and was more divided than it had been in living memory. Caputo, who had just turned seventy, his wife, and their two English setters took off in a truck hauling an Airstream camper from Key West, Florida, en route via back roads and state routes to Deadhorse, Alaska. The journey took four months and covered seventeen thousand miles, during which Caputo interviewed more than eighty Americans from all walks of life to get a picture of what their lives and the life of the nation are really about in the twenty-first century.

About Philip Caputo

Philip Caputo spent nine years as a reporter for the Chicago Tribune, including five years as a foreign correspondent, and shared a Pulitzer Prize in 1972 for his reporting on election fraud in Chicago. In 1975, he was wounded in Beirut and during his convalescence completed the manuscript for A Rumor of War, his much acclaimed memoir about his service in Vietnam. He is the author of eight works of fiction-including Exiles, The Voyage, and Acts of Faith-two memoirs, and four works of nonfiction. In addition, he has been a contributing editor for the New York Times Magazine, Esquire, National Geographic, and several other publications. He divides his time between Connecticut and Arizona.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Bob

I read A Rumor of War a long time ago and was very impressed with the author and the way he approached the subject. I've also crossed the country a couple of times in my Jeep, always staying off the Interstate, camping a lot. Also drove back from Puerto Vallerta to LA with a friend-- Mexico was great......more

Goodreads review by Larry

If you have read Blue Highways by William Least Heat Moon, you know that this book comes in a distant second. I experienced this book as I do most books these days by listening to the audible version by following along with the e-book. This is a travel book. The trip of a couple and their two dogs fr......more

Goodreads review by Nancy

My thanks to LibraryThing and to Henry Holt for my copy. The author's father once said that there was nothing like being "in a car with everything you need, nothing more, and an open road in front of you." Jack Kerouac wrote "Nothing behind me, everything ahead of me, as is so ever on the road." Whe......more