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Women's Fiction
People I Met Hitchhiking On USA Highways

People I Met Hitchhiking On USA Highways

List Price: $15.00
Your Price: $12.75
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Journey
Review: "People I Met Hitchhiking" is about a man on a journey to help people by posting his messages on telephone poles. Simple messages, phrases that will perhaps motivate people to be better human beings, but this is not the point of the book. As reflected in the title, the fascinating part of the book is the stories about the people the author meets on the road. Stories of ordinary people's dreams, flaws, ideas, insanity, generosity and cruelty. In it is a vital reflection of the extremes of the human condition, told in a very simple way. Eric's narration wanders from the concrete to the dreamlike, connecting the past with the present at times, but following a larger narrative frame. Stories of bad jobs, good jobs, growing, relationships and living punctuate the hitchhiking episodes, explaining much about what it means to be alive in this world. It's about the freedom to travel and the slavery to wage jobs, and how real people live day to day, and how the poor are undermined and dehumanized by the rich and each other. It's a piece of work that is a fascinating portrait of America, at once beautiful and horrible, awkward and elegant, but extremely rewarding.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: fodder
Review: "People I Met Hitchhiking" is about a man on a journey to help people by posting his messages on telephone poles. Simple messages, phrases that will perhaps motivate people to be better human beings, but this is not the point of the book. As reflected in the title, the fascinating part of the book is the stories about the people the author meets on the road. Stories of ordinary people's dreams, flaws, ideas, insanity, generosity and cruelty. In it is a vital reflection of the extremes of the human condition, told in a very simple way. Eric's narration wanders from the concrete to the dreamlike, connecting the past with the present at times, but following a larger narrative frame. Stories of bad jobs, good jobs, growing, relationships and living punctuate the hitchhiking episodes, explaining much about what it means to be alive in this world. It's about the freedom to travel and the slavery to wage jobs, and how real people live day to day, and how the poor are undermined and dehumanized by the rich and each other. It's a piece of work that is a fascinating portrait of America, at once beautiful and horrible, awkward and elegant, but extremely rewarding.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A lost world brought back to life ...
Review: Eric Chaet, like few people you've probably met if you are under 50, hiked the back roads and byways of this magnificent land with an idealist's (and an iconoclast's) spirit and faith, a couple of bucks, a lot of error and a lot of footwork.

He gamely recorded--like a latter-day John Lomax, but in the relatively reserved, reflected medium of the written word--his impressions of American life and of personalities met along the way.

The results are not pretty: neither the book's homely, vanity-press look nor the Economy Plan writing are going to wow fans of the flowery Kerouac or the devisedly affecting F. O'Connor or C. McCarthy, never mind the irreadably over-intent Faulkner. (Pick a litteratus whose signature dishonesty screams "Edit me!") But there's no fakery here. Just the facts, ma'am. Is such drudge, from such a trudge, anything? Yes: it's the world Out There, ab-literate.

(On the rather minor, presentational score, can we cut an ordinary citizen, cutting his own way through the Breaks, holes in pockets, his own break?)

Chaet's memoir constitutes one of the last, best time capsules of the world of the innocent, average 'hiker'--the real road warrior. It's a world now all but obscured by the faux 'interestingness' of the wild (not wilderness) pursuits of the REInoscenti--downhillers, all--whose 'adventures' ever trend 'upscale' on their way downslope to the depressingly familiar: monied, hi-tech and insular Xtreme Escapes available only to--perhaps imaginable only by--the rich and the bored.



Rating: 1 stars
Summary: fodder
Review: I saw an add for this book in the Atlantic Monthly that caught my eye. I was a sucker and bought it. This is a horrible book. The only reason someone would by this book is if they know the author and feel pity towards him. (Mother). All-around a poor disorganized bastardization of "Into the Wild", "On the Road", etc. No doubt the other wrote the 5-star review. Luckily, I was able to return my copy for a refund.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Seeing & Saying It as It is
Review: The characters I encountered in "People I Met Hitchhiking" are reminiscent of the characters one runs into while reading the novels of James Hadley Chase. Chase was a writer who had an unrivalled penchant for inventing characters and a dramatic ability for activating them with contagious emotions that sank into the minds of his readers. While the works of Chase, though inspired by reality, were chiefly fictions, "People I Met Hitchhiking" portrays the tumultuous challenges of daily existence in the endeavour to live out dreams, which viewed from a distance, appear trivial, yet culminate in the factor that distinguishes 'The men' from 'The boys'. With most of his work plotted on the grass-root level of the American society, Chase was a writer who had a profound, encyclopaedic knowledge of social psychology and human character. "People I Met Hitchhiking" starts where Chase's work ends, thereby fulfilling the mission of visionary fiction through the personal, pragmatic experiences of an individual, now put at the benefit of others. This is an indispensable, practical handbook for those seeking to understand better life in the US as it is.


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