The Book Club Online is the oldest book club on the Internet, begun in 1996, open to everyone. We offer cordial discussions of one book a month, 24/7 and enjoy the company of readers from all over the world. Everyone is welcome.March Book Club Online
Blue Highways - a Journey into America
by William Least Heat-Moon
| This should be FUN! Whether you decide to read and discuss William Least Heat-Moon's classic 1978 travel account or share your own memories of the "blue highways" of America, you will probably leave winter doldrums behind - in your driveway. Heat-Moon coined the term to refer to small, forgotten, out-of-the-way roads connecting rural America (which were drawn in blue on the old style Rand McNally road atlas).
The book chronicles the author's 13,000-mile journey and the people he meets along the way, as he steers clear of cities and interstates, avoiding fast food and exploring local American culture. His book was on the NY Times’ best seller list for 42 weeks in 1982-83, and its title became a cultural code word for a journey of introspection and discovery. Some questions we'll explore: * What's left of the country stores and cafes on the old blue highways? * Do you have photographs?
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Some Topics for Discussion
April 10-14 (Westward) ~ Md, VA, WVA, OH, IN, Ill, MO
1. Least Heat-Moon wastes no time visiting the sights or even talking to people on the road, as he travels westward towards home. How did you understand that?
2. Do you remember the old full service gas stations? Does Heat-Moon's memory of Vern's Service Station of his youth indicate a nostalgic wish to return to the old ways of doing things?
3. Spotsylvania, VA, where the Battle of the Bloody Angle was fought in which 13,000 men were lost in savage combat in one square mile - why did Heat-Moon refer to this area as "the bluest of the back roads?" Does he believe this road will probably be traveled again? Has man learned the futility of war?
4. How did Heat-Moon sum up what he had accomplished in his season on the blue highways?
Does the expression, "moments of glimpsed clarity" pretty well describe his journey?
5. Has the question of his choice of a circular route been answered in the words of Black Elk?
6. Buckhannon, WVA, "beautiful country, despite hills clobbered with broken appliances and automobile fragments". Shades of Smith Island's repository of junk? What had he learned from Miz Alice about this very thing?
7. Sutton, WVA - "everything here nearing an end." Can you see where the Secretary of
State wrote Heat-Moon a letter of complaint after the book was published, banning him from ever returning to the state of West Virginia?
8. "I can't say I learned what I wanted to know, because I hadn't known what I wanted to know. But I did learn what I didn't know I wanted to know." Your thoughts on this?