If we bother to look, there're always books waiting to be read. I'd get stuck in a reading rut, yes, in that sad zone where no stories seem interesting. But there's no such thing as running out of books to read. Rummaged through the stack of 'unread' and picked up 'The Lost Continent' written by Bill Bryson more than a decade ago.
The story traces Bill Bryson's return from England to Des Moines, Iowa. He sets out on a classic roadtrip in search of a mythical town- Amalgam. The story is filled with lots of experiences Bill Bryson chalks up along the way, hilariously noted down in writing, recording bits of America everyone is familiar with in their own ways.
When you come from Des Moines you either accept the fact without question and settle down with a local girl named Bobbi and get a job at the Firestone Factory and live there for ever and ever, or you spend your adolescence moaning at length about what a dump it is and how you can't wait to get out, and then you settle down with a local girl named Bobbi and get a job at the Firestone factory and live there for ever and ever.
This isn't really a book to educate foreigners about America. I think television did a lot for that. Especially reality tv. Anyway, he wrote it way back in 1989 before reality tv and we only had...I dunno, Days of Our Lives and General Hospital...which are greatly inaccurate portrayals, unlike Scrubs and Grey's Anatomy, and oh CSI. *cue poker face This book touches on the eccentricities of small-town America, which is not unlike small-town everywhere else, and instead hopes to poke fun at Americans in a good-natured way, through his inner voice that is sarcastic and endearing all at once, and tries to portray America in another light. Not sure how I'll feel if I had read the book all those years ago. Probably wouldn't have appreciated the humor. Today, in light of every life experience, the stories in 1989, don't feel all that horrifying, or alien.
Here's an extract on his observation of the little town of Wall, in South Dakota.
It's an awful place, one of the world's biggest tourist traps, but I loved it and I won't have a word said against it. In 1931, a guy named Ted Hustead bought Wall Drug. Buying a drugstore in a town in South Dakota with a population of 300 people at the height of a great depression must be about as stupid a business decision as you can make. But Hustead realized that people driving across places like South Dakota were so delirious with boredom that they would stop and look at almost anything.
I was hugely disappointed to discover that Wall Drug wasn't just an overgrown drugstore as I had always imagined. It was more a mini shopping mall, with about forty little stores selling all kinds of different things - postcards, film, Western wear, jewellery, cowboy boots, food, paintings and endless souvenirs. I bought a very nice kerosene lamp in the shape of Mount Rushmore. The wick and the glass jar that encloses it sprout directly out of George Washington's head. It was made in Japan and the four Presidents have a distinctly oriental slant to their eyes. There were many other gifts and keepsakes of this type, though none quite as beautiful or charming. Sadly, there were no baseball caps with plastic turds on the brim. Wall Drug is a family store, so that sort of thing is right out. It was a pity because this was the last souvenir place I was likely to encounter on the trip. Another dream would have to go unfulfilled.
Non-stop laughter all the way through. Thoroughly enjoyable.
3 comments:
i'd re-read BB's dictionary of troublesome words when i am in a reading rut. just to stop myself from sliding into st's version of good english :)
Totally. The humor revives all sian-ness.
All right, I'll take a look.
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