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Horatio's First Road Trip
Monday 23rd July 2007

Yeah, yeah, we know. It's about the journey, not the destination. But sometimes the journey can be a little...boring. Road trips are our favorite getaway but sometimes we just want to get there already! For those formidable drives (I-5, anyone?), take a break from the radio, your iPod, or that mixed tape you dug out of the glove compartment and instead read a book. Ok, don't read it, but listen to someone else read it. In this case, Ken Burns and Tom Hanks. Horatio's Drive: America's First Road Trip is the perfect yarn to keep you from yawning.
From Amazon.com:
In 1903, Horatio Nelson Jackson, a 31-year-old doctor from Vermont, made a bet that he could drive a car from San Francisco to New York. At the time, there were only 150 miles of paved roads in the U.S., many of them east of the Mississippi. Most Americans had never seen a car, never mind taken a ride in one, and gas stations and road maps were practically nonexistent. Nevertheless, the intrepid Jackson (along with his mechanic pal, Sewall Crocker, and, later, a goggles-wearing bulldog named Bud) succeeded in completing the nation's first cross-country road trip in just over two months. Historian Duncan and documentary filmmaker Burns read the bulk of this audio adaptation, which is a companion to the forthcoming PBS film, with all the enthusiasm of a pair of travelers setting off on the open road. Their telling is often enhanced by music: a jaunty banjo sings when things are moving along nicely, and an agitated piano protests when the car gets stuck in mud for the umpteenth time. Hanks reads the letters Jackson sends home to his wife, lending Jackson the air of a sympathetic everyman. When the 20-horsepower open air vehicle finally cruises into Manhattan, a band plays as the narrators' voices burst with excitement and pride.
No matter what you encounter on your road trip (dirty gas station bathrooms, road construction, nothing but Big Macs and Whoppers), it won't seem nearly as bad while listening to what Horatio had to go through! And when you get to your destination you can toast the man who paved the way.
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