Showing Tag: "america usa" (Show all posts)

The Dharma Bums

Posted by Jason Hussong on Monday, December 5, 2011,
I had been itching to follow up On the Road for a while, not sure I really gave Jack Kerouac a fair shot with just one book. I mean, I liked On the Road alright all in all, but it didn’t quite live up to my expectations. There were a few things with the story, not so much the writing style, which bothered me. But I knew that couldn’t be all someone of Jack Kerouac’s reputation had to offer, so I gave him a second shot with The Dharma Bums.


The Dharma Bums is most specifically about aut...

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The Best American Travel Writing of 2011

Posted by Jason Hussong on Thursday, November 3, 2011,
It is difficult to fathom looking anxiously forward to the release of a book talking about other people's travels when I have so many exciting destinations of my own to anticipate. Yet, I impatiently waited at my mailbox this fall for the arrival of the latest edition of The Best American Travel Writing. I have fallen in love with the series and wanted to get my hands on the 2011 edition as soon as it arrived.

The Best American Travel Writing of 2011, edited by Sloane Crosley, is, obvi...

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My Five Favorite Travel Books

Posted by Jason Hussong on Thursday, June 23, 2011,
I'm not much of a listmaker outside of grocery shopping, packing for vacations, or - alright, I'm a listmaker, born and raised. There, I admitted it. I create lists and write notes down, only to feel the pleasure of crossing something off of them, for most anything I do. And it is no small wonder I haven't yet created any sort of list when it comes to travel writing. Well, that is until now.

I stare at my bookshelf in wonder and am amazed at the great number of fantastic sto...

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The Yosemite

Posted by Jason Hussong on Thursday, April 21, 2011,
When I bought My First Summer in the Sierra by John Muir at the Muir Woods National Monument, I also purchased a second book of his: The Yosemite. It seemed smart to pick up a copy, since I was on my way to Yosemite National Park. Reading what Muir thought of the valley was definitely important to me, since I was trying to learn more about the man, but what I found in the pages was nothing close to what I expected.



The Yosemite by John Muir isn't so much a story of his time spent in the ...

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My First Summer in the Sierra

Posted by Jason Hussong on Monday, April 11, 2011,
I wanted to learn more about John Muir, so while I was at the Muir Woods National Monument north of San Francisco, I picked up a copy of My First Summer in the Sierra. It seemed reasonable to think that I would learn the most about Muir from his own words, particularly those he wrote in the mountains to which I would soon be driving. So, shortly after purchasing my new book, I kicked back in my hotel after a day spent exploring the streets of San Francisco, cracked the binding and began devou...

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Photos of The Drive North

Posted by Jason Hussong on Friday, April 1, 2011,


I so easily get lost in the pages of books. I love the texture and smell of the pages. I love cracking the binding and making it mine. But sometimes a good book is missing a few pictures to help set the scene. I tried to include some as chapter covers in The Drive North, making them into a cool sketchy design with the help of a friend, but it wasn't enough in my mind. So, in order to give the reader a better look at my journey, I have included some photos here on my Facebook page.


I t...

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Complete National Parks of the United States

Posted by Jason Hussong on Thursday, February 3, 2011,
I purchased another book with my Christmas gift card in addition to Bill Bryson's African Diary. And just like it, I had also seen this one on the shelf at the book store several months ago. I passed on buying National Geographic's Complete National Parks of the United States at that time because it is more of a desk reference book, opposed to a guide I'd carry along with me on a hike. I'm glad I picked it up now, though, because it is one heck of a desk reference.

I have not yet read Co...

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The Best American Travel Writing of 2010

Posted by Jason Hussong on Tuesday, November 23, 2010,
I'm getting more time to read as the months get colder. I'm going out for fewer hikes, as well as other things, and staying in more to curl up in a blanket on the couch and read. At times I'm even reading three or four books at a time, maybe one more than I usually do, and get getting through them faster than before. One such book that I zipped through was The Best American Travel Writing of 2010 - a collection of, well, the best American travel writing over the past year.

I loved readin...

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Sailing Alone Around the World

Posted by Jason Hussong on Thursday, November 18, 2010,
I tend to find myself in a bookstore for a randomly justified reason. I really have no good reason to head in, as though I'm out of books to read, but I somehow make up a reason and go in there and buy something I don't really need. I did this a few months ago and picked up, among other things, Joshua Slocum's Sailing Alone Around the World. And honestly, I'm not even totally sure why I bought it since I'm not exactly interested in sailing.

Like many books tend to do after I buy them, Sa...

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A Travel Guide to the Plains Indian Wars

Posted by Jason Hussong on Monday, October 18, 2010,
Generally speaking, I've given up on guide books. I just don't use them any longer, and I don't see the need to thanks to our good friend the Internet. So much information is available for free here that it doesn't make sense to spend money on a book to give you the same information. But when I came across Stan Hoig's A Travel Guide to the Plains Indian Wars I felt a bit different. And after giving it a read, and putting it to some use, I'm glad I thought otherwise.

A Travel Guide to the...

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The Story of Writing a Travel Book

Posted by Jason Hussong on Wednesday, October 6, 2010,
I've spent the better part of fifteen or sixteen months researching and writing a travel memoir, and now it's all on two little USB sticks on my desk. I still have a lot of editing to do, and things to change, but the better part of my first book is done and I couldn't be more happy. I'm pleased with the way the trip that I'm writing about went, as well as how I'm incorporating past travels into the story, and how it has come into being electronically. But now the hard part of fine tuning ...

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Blue Highways

Posted by Jason Hussong on Monday, September 27, 2010,
I was picking through the books on the shelf at the store looking for something good to read and I came across William Least Heat-Moon's Blue Highways: A Journey into America. I seemed to recall having seen the name somewhere before, but couldn't quite place it at the time. As it turns out, though, it was on World Hum's 100 Most Celebrated Travel Books of All Time list. In a word: jackpot.

I zipped through Blue Highways as though I'd receive one million dollars when I finished. I loved it ...

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The Midway Point of Writing a Book

Posted by Jason Hussong on Monday, July 26, 2010,
A number of friends have told me that I need to write a book about my travels. They remind me of all the places I've seen, and encourage me to write a book about it all. So, after hearing enough of it, I've finally got the ball rolling and am about halfway through the story - something I've found to be much more difficult than I had initially anticipated.

I knew writing a book would be a lot of work, but you just pour so much of yourself into it that it's difficult not to fuss over every...

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The National Parks

Posted by Jason Hussong on Monday, May 24, 2010,
In the past year that I've had my annual National Park pass I've hit 24 national parks, monuments and historic sites. Some I've spent quite a bit of time exploring, and others have been mere afternoon stops on my way to something else. But the one thing that they all have in common is that they've made me more and more curious and interested in my country's national parks. Because of this, I picked up The National Parks: America's Best Idea by Dayton Duncan and Ken Burns to read and learn mor...

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The Best American Travel Writing of 2009

Posted by Jason Hussong on Thursday, April 8, 2010,
As soon as I finished and put down The Best American Travel Writing of 2008, edited by Anthony Bourdain, I knew I had to pick up the 2009 edition. I enjoyed the previous one enough, my first taste at the series, and wanted to read more. Thankfully the 2009 book was already on the shelves so I could easily run down to the store to pick up a copy. But, I didn't do this without some trepidation.

So many great books I've read, or movies I've seen, have been followed up with flop sequels. Of co...

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Americana: Dispatches from the New Frontier

Posted by Jason Hussong on Wednesday, December 30, 2009,
With the picture of a gleaming Airstream motorhome on the cover of the book I had initially expected it to be about author Hampton Sides' travels across America; one big road trip of sorts. Instead, Americana: Dispatches from the New Frontier, are a collection of his essays about what make the United States great. And it's not just specific places, as I had assumed by the cover, but instead about the people, events and ideas that have helped shape this land to what it is over the last few d...

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The Journals of Lewis and Clark

Posted by Jason Hussong on Monday, December 21, 2009,
There are so many historic trails in the United States that it's difficult to pick just one to study. The Lewis and Clark trail though holds a special place in the hearts of Americans, largely because it's the only one most of us have heard of, as we learned about it in grade school. To further my very limited grade school knowledge, I thought it'd be a good idea to pick up The Journals of Lewis and Clark and give it a go as there didn't seem to be a better way to learn about such a trip th...

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A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail

Posted by Jason Hussong on Tuesday, August 18, 2009,
Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods: Rediscovering America on the Appalachian Trail turned out to be a much better buy at the Denver Public Library used book sale than the Theroux sadness I recently read. Granted it was only a dollar as well, but what a great find, or gift rather. And that gift is what I want to talk about here.

Why not review the book I'm saying I'm going to review? Well, alright, I'll do that first. It's a Bill Bryson book, so everyone already knows it'll be a winner. And yeah...
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The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid: A Memoir

Posted by Jason Hussong on Tuesday, August 18, 2009,
The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid is a fantastic memoir of what life was like growing up in Des Moines, Iowa in the 1950s for Bill Bryson. And as far as I'm concerned, despite a 30 year difference, it's not much different than what it was like growing up for me just a bit farther up Interstate 35 in the Twin Cities.

With each page I turned I felt as though I swam a lap in my own memory. The book helped me recall so much of my own childhood that I found it quite difficult to put down. T...

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Guide to the National Parks of the United States

Posted by Jason Hussong on Tuesday, August 18, 2009,
I recently purchased, with my girlfriend Amy, the National Geographic sixth edition Guide to National Parks of the United
States
. I thought it'd be a great companion for the American the Beautiful annual National Parks pass I planned on purchasing this year.

There are just so many national parks I plan on visiting this year that it only seemed logical. And with one national monument, the Florissant Fossil Beds, below, already under my belt I've already started getting my money's worth.

In re...

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I'm a Stranger Here Myself

Posted by Jason Hussong on Tuesday, August 18, 2009,
I read my first Bill Bryson book about 16 months ago before I took my vacation to Australia and New Zealand. In a Sunburned Country seemed like the perfect book to read before heading downunder, and it came highly recommended to me by several friends.

Since then I have not had an opportunity to pick up another one of Bryson's books, which I regret, until I was given I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After Twenty Years Away by my father for Christmas.

When I first picked ...

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