Return to Home Page

May 15, 2006

World Hum’s Top-30 travel books: Road Fever

roadfever_thumb.gif

Over at World Hum, the (somewhat subjective) countdown of the top-30 travel books of all time continues. My latest contributions to the roundup include Tony Horwitz’s Baghdad Without a Map (#26), and Tim Cahill’s Road Fever (#21).

Of Road Fever, I write:

A founding editor of Outside magazine, Cahill has been credited with revitalizing adventure writing—a genre that had previously been confined to breathless, semi-fictional tales of danger in the pages of low-culture men’s magazines. The tongue-in-cheek titles of Cahill’s early essay collections—“Jaguars Ripped My Flesh”; “A Wolverine is Eating My Leg”; “Pecked to Death by Ducks”—are a nod to his pulpy precursors, but his writing is the opposite of pulp: informed, nuanced, self-deprecating, and frequently laugh-out-loud funny.

Road Fever, Cahill’s only book-length travel narrative, chronicles a 15,000-mile dash to set a world record by driving overland across the Americas in less than 24 days. In many ways, it’s an anti-adventure book, since a large portion of the tale documents the process of making plans and procuring corporate sponsorship—but this says a lot about the competitive, publicity-driven, and weirdly postmodern state of post-Exploration Age adventure. The author’s partner in the journey is professional endurance driver Gary Sowerby, and together the duo deal with fatigue, dangerous roads, stubborn bureaucrats—and an overabundance of sponsor-supplied pudding—as they race north into the pages of the “Guinness Book of World Records.” As the miles speed by, Cahill’s exuberant reporting and eye for the absurd make for an amusing and exhilarating ride.

An index of the Top 30 travel books (updated daily) can be found here.

Posted by | Comments (2) 
Category: Travel News, Travel Writing


2 Responses to “World Hum’s Top-30 travel books: Road Fever”

  1. justin Says:

    Road Fever has always been one of my personal favorite travel books of all time! Perfect mixture of humor and annoyance shared with traveling along side a stranger for two weeks in the cab of a truck. I can only imagine.

    My favorite memory from the book is the instant coffee made with sparkling bottled water. They were too tired to care. Classic.

  2. ann Says:

    where did you grow up?

Leave a Reply

Main

Bio

Books

Stories

Essays

Video

Interviews

Events

Images

Writers

Marco

Guide

News

Paris

Vagabonding.net

Contact

Marco Polo Didnt Go There
Rolf's new book!


Vagabonding
   Vagabonding


RECENT COMMENTS

Rebecca Travel-Writers-Exchange: Have a safe trip home! Most people are not fond of...

Karyn Deleston: GradyZora is my favorite on the show. This is by far my favorite show...

Colleen Wilde: Alright!!! I’m glad I have so many fellow Foodies on the road with...

Marlin Coffman: Example: Being caught in a “riot” on Big Corn Island,...

Rebecca Travel-Writers-Exchange: Thanks for the information! It’s an amazing feat...

The Backpack Foodie: Well, as you can see from my alias and website, this issue is...

Joya: I agree! The reason we save our money for traveling is so that we can not only...

Andrea Nicole: Hear, hear! My fiance and I never skimp on food when we travel,taking...

Manda Troutman: Joel, Come by our house some time, I’ll let you hold one of our...

Camden Luxford: The absolute truth! I’ll stay in the cheapest, dodgiest, most...

SPONSORED BY :



CATEGORIES

TRAVEL LINKS

ARCHIVES

RECENT ENTRIES

Lessons learned in Haiti
The humbling experience of being oblivious
Around the world with ‘The Lost Cyclist’
Culinary vagabonding
Consumer debt has a way of trapping one’s life into a holding pattern
Spring festivals in the Caribbean and Latin America
Tokyo’s ancient eco past
Babies: a reason to travel
Resiliency in the face of tragedy
The initiation rites of travel


Subscribe to this blog's feed
Counter