Taking the Great American Roadtrip
In the spirit of Kerouac and Steinbeck, the celebrated travel writer fulfills a childhood fantasy: to drive across his native land
- By Paul Theroux
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2009, Subscribe
The mixed blessing of America is that anyone with a car can go anywhere. The visible expression of our freedom is that we are a country without roadblocks. And a driver's license is our identity. My dream, from way back—from high school, when I first heard the name Kerouac—was of driving across the United States. The cross-country trip is the supreme example of the journey as the destination.
Travel is mostly about dreams—dreaming of landscapes or cities, imagining yourself in them, murmuring the bewitching place names, and then finding a way to make the dream come true. The dream can also be one that involves hardship, slogging through a forest, paddling down a river, confronting suspicious people, living in a hostile place, testing your adaptability, hoping for some sort of revelation. All my traveling life, 40 years of peregrinating Africa, Asia, South America and Oceania, I have thought constantly of home—and especially of the America I had never seen. "I discovered I did not know my own country," Steinbeck wrote in Travels with Charley, explaining why he hit the road at age 58.
My idea was not to linger anywhere, but to keep on the move, as though to create in my mind one long panning shot, from Los Angeles to Cape Cod; to get up each morning and set off after breakfast, going as far as I wished, and then find a place to sleep. Generations of drivers have obviously felt the same way, since the country has become a set of natural divisions, from Los Angeles, say, to Las Vegas, Las Vegas to Sedona, Sedona to Santa Fe—but I am getting ahead of myself.
Speeding east in late spring rain from the Pacific waves lapping at the edge of Los Angeles Airport, disentangling myself from Los Angeles, struggling from freeway to freeway, I was reminded that much of my life has been spent this way—escaping from cities. I wanted to see the glimmering spaces in the distances that lay between big cities, the road that unrolled before me. Los Angeles was a complex set of on-ramps and merging freeways, like a gigantic game of snakes and ladders that propelled me though the bungaloid body of the city to deliver me to Rancho Cucamonga. Beyond the thinner scattering of houses was the sight of bare hills, a distinct canyon and a glimpse of desert as I cruised into Barstow, California. Then I was happy.
I was reminded that first day and every day after that we are a restless nation, rattling from road to road; a nation that had largely abandoned long-distance trains because they did not go to enough places. It is in our nature as Americans to want to drive everywhere, even into the wilderness. The nature writer Edward Abbey decried in Desert Solitaire the fact that access roads were planned for Arches National Monument in Utah when he was a ranger there. Around Barstow, I was thinking of Abbey, who once exclaimed to a friend that the most glorious vision he'd beheld in his life was "the sight of a billboard burning against the sky."
What made Barstow's billboards a peculiar blight was the contrast with everything that lay around them—the landscape that was so stark and dramatic as a brooding expanse of withered shrubs and fat cactuses, the stony roads that seemed to lead nowhere, the bleak and beautiful backdrop that seemed as though no one had laid a hand on it, with lively colorations at a distance and up close so dry, like a valley of bones looking as though they could not support life. I had seen deserts in Patagonia and Turkmenistan, northern Kenya and Xinjiang in western China; but I had never seen anything like this. The revelation of the Mojave Desert was (peering past the billboards) not just its illusion of emptiness but its assertive power of exclusion, the low bald hills and far-off mountains looking toasted and forbidding under the darkening sky.
That sky slipped lower, scattered rain that quickly evaporated on the road, and then gouts of marble-size hailstones swept over the road ahead, like a plague of mothballs. And in that whitening deluge I could make out the Ten Commandments, set out by the roadside in the manner of Burma-Shave signs, You Shall Not Murder... You Shall Not Commit Adultery, like a word to the wise, until the state line into Nevada, and just beyond, the little town of Primm, overshadowed by its big bulking casinos.
I turned off the super-slab to travel the slower parallel road away from the speeding cars. This route took me past Henderson, and its empty malls, and soon up ahead the lights and the tall hotels.
I had never seen Las Vegas before. I was driving down the Strip, which was like the midway of the largest imaginable carnival—a free-for-all, with masks and bingeing. Passing me were slow-moving trucks, pulling mobile billboards that advertised girls for hire and restaurants, magicians, singers, shows. The hotels and casinos were shaped like Oriental palaces, with turrets and waterfalls, and familiarly, the Eiffel Tower, the Great Sphinx guarding a glassy pyramid, the Arc de Triomphe that had the texture of stale cake.
The city of fun houses dazzled me for a day, until my eyes became habituated to the scene, and then I was depressed. Yet Las Vegas is in its way as American as a lobster pot, a lighthouse, a field of corn, a red barn; but it is more. Unlike those iconic images, Las Vegas represents the fulfillment of childish fantasies—easy money, entertainment, sex, risk, elbowroom, self-indulgence. As a city without limits, it can go on spreading into the desert that surrounds it, reinventing itself as long as the water holds out.
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Comments (38)
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aye. very good. highly reminiscent of William Least Heat Moon's - Blue Highways. it inspires both more reading and travel. two of my favorites.
Posted by g butler on September 17,2012 | 10:07 AM
Some of my best trips were with my husband when he drove a truck. I got to see every state except for the New England states. We were out for two weeks at a time and on some trips we stayed out for a month at a time. I can't go now because of bad health, but I sure do love to read of other's trips.
There is nothing more beautiful than seeing the surprises around each curve, or over the next hill, and you never see the same old thing when crossing the desert or going over the mountains. There is always something different that you missed the last time.
I miss not going any more. Sometimes I just get out my atlas and take a trip all by myself by remembering the places we went.
Thank you for your story. I enjoyed taking the trip with you this time.
Posted by Nancy Isbell on April 20,2012 | 03:48 PM
This was a real disappointing article. This write makes blanket statements about towns, such as Santa Fe-loaded with so much culture, art, beauty, history, and doesn't say why. 'I left the next day, not going back.." WHY? would be my question. Yet he wants to return to Gallup! Gallup is a sad, sad town of drunks and unemployed people, hocking their jewelry to tourists. As an anglo, this writer would fit in like a bright pink Camaro. I feel this trip had way too much crammed into it, with no nuance or true travel writing talent.
Plus, the online version of the had no graphic of a map. That's just wrong. Nice idea, poor delivery.
Posted by rae sanchez on April 19,2012 | 02:41 AM
I also finally made the trek, back and forth, over the course of three months last year. With rare exceptions, I mostly 'car camped' at state and national parks. Before the sun began to set, I'd keep my eyes open for a tent symbol on a brown sign and pull over wherever that may be. Wind River Canyon in Wyoming might have been my favorite. It didn't hurt to wake up first thing and enjoy the hot springs in Thermopolis. In that part of the country, I found it was worlds better taking state roads versus interstates, not that there are a ton of interstates to choose from. The book, Road Trip USA, helped me a great deal.
I found traveling the U.S. to be a much more personal journey than backpacking around Europe. In the U.S., you just don't meet as many people as you would on a train to Rome. People are more closed off, for better or for worse, and so I found it took a lot of effort to have meaningful interactions with people. Then again, I'm more reserved myself.
But, yes, it's all about the sounds that accompany any given landscape. The right Dylan song as the setting sun paints a cliffside pink, conservative AM talk radio in the dark of night, crackling weather advisories as wildfires tear through Amarillo. Or those long gaps of silence where you snap out of it to realize you've been listening to nothing but the hum of the road.
Zen.
Posted by Randolph III on January 20,2012 | 08:08 AM
An inspirational post.
All my life I've wanted to do a road trip across the states. I've traveled my own country (Canada) which was and still is very rewarding. Doing the trip on a motorcycle is my dream though. The 'weather window' is so much longer in the southern part of your country. Well, I've finally taken a step toward this and bought myself a beautiful Harley-Davidson and will be off on my trek sometime this spring, by myself, to see where the open roads take me!
I wish everyone good luck on the roads ahead.
Drew
Posted by Andrew Lick on January 4,2012 | 06:02 PM
I've been roadtripping for several decades and the freedom you mention to, "...get up each morning and set off after breakfast, going as far as I wished, and then find a place to sleep.", is what makes me keep going back to the road. After years on the freeways, I've decided the old 2-lane highways are the true roadtrip. You can now come along on my virtual roadtrip, traveling through the year 1962, at http://www.roadtrip62.com/ .
Posted by Donald Dale Milne on December 24,2011 | 11:18 PM
I loved your sense of being American.I am so thankful that there was forsight enough to create the National Parks in America for everyone"s enjoyment -rich and poor. God Bless America.
Posted by anna franklin on December 12,2011 | 12:13 AM
Wow very nice post...........
Posted by Kamagra on September 20,2011 | 01:57 AM
I hope some day it shall be possible to traverse any country on road without the slighest fear- of being attacked or inexistence of roads.that's the main hindrance in our world -Africa
Posted by on July 25,2011 | 11:02 AM
Good article.
I have been hitchhiking the United States for most of fourteen years now. I had a book published in 2008: "High Plains Drifter: A Hitchhiking Journey Across America" (Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble).
If you want to read about my travels, here is my blog: http://tim-shey.blogspot.com
Posted by Tim Shey on October 13,2010 | 07:15 PM
Great article. I'd love to do a similar trip (although being Dutch), and I will someday. Funny he mentions my all-time-favorite-roadsong "Take the long way home" by Supertramp. I'll bring a copy with me when I set off. Also nice to see Edward Abbey mentioned. His "Desert Solitaire" (among other books) is a real tip, great book.
Thanks for the post.
Posted by Peter Jonker on May 21,2010 | 05:23 AM
I've been a fair number of places - Nepal, Argentina, all over the Continent for my junior year abroad, two tours in Iraq, with short stopovers in Kuwait and Qatar. I've been to some desolate places, some beautiful places, and plenty of cosmopolitan cultured cities.
It's interesting visiting a big American city after all that experience. I remember my first time in New York City just the way you describe.
But this was different from any trip I'd ever taken. In the 3,380 miles I'd driven, in all that wonder, there wasn't a moment when I felt I didn't belong; not a day when I didn't rejoice in the knowledge that I was part of this beauty; not a moment of alienation or danger, no roadblocks, no sign of officialdom, never a second of feeling I was somewhere distant—but always the reassurance that I was home, where I belonged, in the most beautiful country I'd ever seen.
It was thrilling and enlightening and enervating just like any city I'd ever been to. There were subway trains and newspaper stands and traffic. But this city felt like HOME. They were playing a college football game on a screen in Times Square and little groups of people gathered to watch. A small scuffle broke out between a taxi driver and his fare - the gathered crowds took sides. The taxi took off in a huff, people laughed, and went back to watching the game, or continued on their way.
It was amazing, but not in the little tiniest bit alien. A strange sensation, indeed. Almost a sense of Deja Vu.
I like that you describe your trek down Highway 40 - that was my hometown, growing up, if I had any, hailing as I did from the nomadic tribe of military kids. Big Sur, the Appalachians, the Outer Banks, the Dismal Swamp, the entire state of Iowa, DC on the Potamic, the Mississippi river, all of it, this is one beautiful country. And I've not even been out West much, except for a brief trip inland to Barstow from the coast. I'll have to visit there next. Thanks for the post. :)
Posted by Ruanne on December 7,2009 | 11:16 PM
I too with my family have taken a croos country trip this summer,we as a family went from Miami to Key West up to Washington D.C. and the greatest part of our trip was to see Gettysburg, we had limited time to see things ,but we seen a lot and taking a trip like this was amazing and has sparked an idea to travel even more in the United States.More people need to do this instead of traveling abroad,there is so much to see here.
Thanks
Donna
Posted by Donna on December 2,2009 | 01:51 PM
So...you missed Colorado!! You did mention "books-ago" that you "woke up in Fort Morgan", during a train trip through our state. I lived there at the time and wrote you a fan message, to which you actually replied (in your own hand). Your thoughtfulness was much appreciated. This was some years ago, and since then I have accumulated most of your books and an enormous admiration for your craft (inspired by travel and a very highly developed imagination in some of the novels!). A grandson has two of your childrens books which I located on Alibris. They are charming stories.
Anxiously awaiting your upcoming book (my order is in). Is it too much to hope that you might come through our area? Tattered Cover has a great newer location by downtown Denver (they closed the old one some time ago).
Admiringly: grannycats......(PS: an absolutely clever short story was noted in your "Sex and its Substitutes"!)
Posted by paula cornelison on October 26,2009 | 05:28 AM
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