
The country has changed a lot since Steinbeck took off on his trip all those decades ago, but his words still resonate with plenty of readers - and plenty of travelers as well. Until the pandemic, when Hammy and I itched for a trip we never missed an opportunity to scratch.” “Hammy, a trauma survivor who is a more bashful and tentative beagle than his predecessor, has become an equally enthusiastic traveler,” she notes. Kaplan writes about the way that travel has affected her as well as her traveling companions. “Since I’ve made the trip out West every two years, on average, always with a beagle - first Darwin, now Hamilton.” Kaplan wrote about another way she’s taken a cue from Steinbeck: traveling with a dog in tow. One big difference, Starchman observes, is that Steinbeck’s preferred method of starting conversations - asking for directions - doesn’t work nearly as well in the age of smartphones.Īt The Washington Post, Melanie D.G. The interview makes for a fascinating look at what has and has not changed in the years since Steinbeck made his journey. Earlier this year, The Mercury News chatted with high school English teacher Bryan Starchman, who traveled to all 50 states on a journey inspired by Steinbeck’s. Travels With Charley hasn’t just led people to savor the writing within the book, however - it’s also prompted some people to literally follow in Steinbeck’s footsteps. And while questions have persisted about the accuracy of some of the encounters described in the book, it remains one of Steinbeck’s most enduring works. His goal was to gain a better understanding of a changing nation the result was the book Travels With Charley: In Search of America, published in 1962. In 1960, John Steinbeck set out in his pick-up truck with his dog Charley to. So, in his delightful and unique travels, a great writer guides us all over modern USA from the cold, beautiful, taciturn North to his love affair with Montana through Idaho, Seattle, California, the vast spaces and king-size hospitalities of Texas on to New Orleans and a drama of racial hate then home through Alabama, Virginia, Pennsylvania.At the age of 58, John Steinbeck set off across the United States with his dog Charley in tow. Travels with Charley: In Search of America - Penguin Modern Classics (Paperback). His only companion was his elderly dog Charley, his transport a wondrously equipped pick-up truck christened Rocinante. "Feeling that he had lost the intimate knowledge of his vast native land he valued so highly John Steinbeck set out to 'rediscover' America. Very Good Condition, a little edge and shelf wear, age-toning to edges, minor watermarking to end-papers, dust-jacket shows edge and shelf wear with watermarking, rubbing, chipping, small tears and small parts missing at edges (see photographs) After self reflection, he reports, 'I did not know my own country' (5). He states that his main objective in taking his cross-country trip is to reconnect with America. Readers Book Club, 1964,hardcover, dust-jacket In Part One of Travels with Charley, Steinbeck outlines the purpose of his journey.
