Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: The best book inside the backroads of America Review: This is the best book I have read which searches for the true America. Rural American values are what this country was founded upon. The book is interesting as it explores each region of America and shows us its differences and simalarites of the uniqueness of this great country.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Blue Highways is America Review: I have read this book twice and each time I have been carried away by the power of the writing. Heat Moon's detailed descriptions of small town America are absolutely riveting. I loaned this book to a Chinese friend and told her that it is the single best introduction to America and Americans that I have ever read. What more can be said?
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: One word - fascinating. Review: I finished Blue Highways approximately 2 weeks ago.Never having even heard of William Least Heat-Moon before, I purchased this book based on Amazon recommendations. My only reference point was that I enjoy travel books. Initially I was a little backed off by the sheer length, and I wondered if the author would be able to hold my attention. It was, therefore, with trepidation that I dipped into Blue Highways. I needn't have been concerned. Yes, the book was long (and occasionally I had to re-read a handful of really detailed paragraphs), but William Least Heat-Moon was able to transport me to many of the tiny towns he visited, and I could feel the often intense discomfort of living for a season in his trusted Goast Dancing. I have true respect for this gentleman! The photographs were a wonderful addition and it was nice to put faces to names. I agree that on occasion he was maybe a little overly critical of "modern" life, as some other reviewers have noted, but his opinion is simply own. I didn't feel he was trying to sway the reader; he was stating facts that he felt were significant, and let the reader digest them and form an opinion of his/her own. In short, I would thoroughly recommend this book. The writing is clever, witty and detailed, and reading Blue Highways will take you on a fascinating journey. I have River Horse ready and waiting as well as PrairyErth!
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Close, but no cigar. Review: Although I'm only about half-way through this book, I doubt I'll ever finish it. As with some of the other Least Heat Moon books, he jumps between a wonderful ability to describe places, historic settings, and living people with what comes across has an almost immature political view that somehow all economic developement is tinged with evil and ugliness, although he has no problem with cruising the country over roads in an automobile, and through canals in a motorized boat. While I can't quite get a handle on it, there is something missing in his hand-wringing, that smacks more of someone who will forever only see what he wants to see, and of huge ego. If you're leanings are green party and whiny, you'll love this book. For others, it may prove just a bit too much like reading a college newpaper editorial.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Blue Highways Review: William Least Heat Moon may be one of the greatest writers of our time. First encountered his work in the New Yorker, which excerpted chapters from Blue Highways. I then (of course) had to read the book, which is an account of his journey in an old van, outfitted for sleeping/living, to see the real United States using only the small roads (which are marked on the map in blue -- hence the title). The events that caused him to put his usual life on hold, and take up this oddyssey, will strike a responsive chord for many readers who have ever wanted to stop the world and step back in time. His experiences, the people he meets, the conversations they enjoy, make for an extraordinary insight into America. His writing sings in the way that the old story tellers did...weaving a web that captures and captivates you until you finish the book. And then you don't stop until you've read all of his books! (Wish he'd write some more). I recommend this book highly for personal reading and for gifts.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: A wonderful book Review: It was not an easy journey and it's not a quick read, but the interviews are great. Makes you wish you could spend more time with the people he meets. If you read the book a while ago, pick it up and read the May, 1999 Afterword. I bet you'll re-read the whole book.
Rating: ![3 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-3-0.gif) Summary: Over the Blue Highways Review: In search of the real America, or in need of escape, the author sets out to circle the country in a van, staying only on the state and local roads - the one's that appear blue on his maps. This is the record of what he saw on his trip, from the deep South to the Pacific Northwest, fishermen to farmers, through forests, snowstorms, deserts, and beaches. This novel was deeply personal, and it reflected a feeling I have had in my life to explore the world by experiencing it first hand, not by reading about it in the book. However, sometimes the author seems overly sentimental, bemoaning the loss of regional distinctiveness and lambasting the homogenization of America while not always acknowledging that sometimes changes happen for the better. America has always been a country of change, and he realizes that change is always accompanied by a little bit of pain. As he travels, the philosophizing is not overly explicit. Neither are his personal problems, which are alluded to but not expounded upon. Instead, he lets the people he meets and his experiences with them speak for themselves. Unfortunately, there is nothing very cohesive about the stories, no incentive to get to the end except to see the author's cycle completed. Perhaps a second reading would allow me to pay more attention to the author's personal struggle, but even so, the stories are basically independent, with only the underlying theme of coping with change to tie them together. Perhaps that was the authors' struggle all along.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Favorite Book I own. Review: I purchased this book at a point in my life where I was desiring escape, and the travelogue genre was obviously appealing. I have read it twice, and am reading it again, and cannot even hope to convey the warmth this book will give you. No matter what point you are at in your life, buy this book, you will not regret it. The author experiences a slice of life that we all wish we could, and his knowledge of the history of his route is astounding, and never presented in an intimidating fashion. He presents the people he meets as they are, and both he and us come away the better for it. Appreciating the simple pleasures in life is underrated, and this book cannot be overrated.
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Abook to Read over and over Review: This is the kind of trvel/spiritualaty book that I read over and over - a few pages at a time - to get a glimpse of America and a spoonful of spirituality at the same time. Moon did something every American should do - travel the country and talk with our countrymen. His reflections on his findings are why I keep going back.
Rating: ![2 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-2-0.gif) Summary: A Condescending Smirk at Rural America Review: I tried to like this book, I really did. I started to read it when it first came out, in the 80s, and again recently, and I just didn't enjoy it. It reminds me of PBS specials where some Harvard-educated musicologist ventures into the swamplands to interview old bluesmen, and tell us all the deep socio-economic underpinnings of the lyrics. Forget it. It's just the blues - it's meant to be felt in your bones, not theorized about. "Blue Highways" gave me the same feeling. W.L.H.Moon comes off as self-centered and condescending; he seems to secretly pity those he meets, even as he wants us to chuckle knowingly at them. There are plenty of American travelogues written by people who actually live there. Don't waste your time on this one.
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