As this was an interesting time to be on the road, we took notes, intending to sell a story to a newspaper or whatever and use the loot to help with gas money. On the way home from Iowa, on a Greyhound, I began to elaborate and imagine. Before I could make myself stop, some months or years later, I had written some 1500 pages, a quarter million words.
Ever since, I've put aside other projects and attempted to wrestle those words into some coherence. As yet, I haven't succeeded. So I'll make this entry about my latest road trip brief.
Over ten days, I drove my 2001 Corolla round trip from San Diego to Schaumburg, Illinois, with stops in Colorado Springs and Iowa. Here are a few observations.
• The Interstate highway system needs plenty of work, especially in Colorado.
• Just as the people one meets in Walmart are generally nicer than those in Nordstrom's, so the patrons of McDonald's are friendlier than those in Starbucks.
• McDonald's, whose burgers and such I won't eat, as the quantity of salt they use makes my mouth numb, now offers good iced latte and fruit and yogurt parfaits.
• Most, but not all, country music is silly.
• A drive across the west can still inspire and revitalize our sense of awe.
1 comment:
I agree, Ken. The perfect moment to write will never happen this side of eternity. I think of the Bible and all the places and times that the prophets, Apostles, and others wrote. They wrote through wars, from prison, in sickness, and in fear for their lives--and because they were faithful to what God them to do, their words live on for us to read and be inspired by. And they didn't even have computers! I look forward to hearing more back your new book. Any sneak peeks?
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