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Way Off the Road: Discovering the Peculiar Charms of Small Town America |
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Author:
Bill Geist
By Broadway
Average Customer Rating:     
List Price: $13.95
Our Price: $7.92
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Product Description
“To say it very simply, freezer burn may very well have set in.” —neighbor on the frozen dead guy kept on ice in a backyard shed in Nederland, Colorado.
“Everybody loves a parade; we were just geographically challenged.” —David Harrenstein, organizer of a parade in tiny Whalan, Minnesota, where viewers are in motion and the “marchers” stand still.
“We haven’t lost anyone off these switchbacks in at least ten days” —Mailman Charlie Chamberlain, leading us on horseback 2,500 feet down the sheer walls of the Grand Canyon. “Ours are the finest cow chips in the world today,” —Kirk Fisher, enthusiast, in Beaver, Oklahoma, world cow-chip capital and cow- chip exporter.
“We live out in the middle of the corn and bean fields, and there’s not a whole lot to get excited about, you know?” —Dan Moretz, on celebrating the day the sun sets in the middle of the railroad tracks in Hanlontown, Iowa.
“It’s like drilling for oil; sometimes you come up dry.” —Gay Balfour, who sucks problematic prairie dogs out of the ground with a sewer vacuum in Cortez, Colorado.
“All you have to do is beat the flies to it,” —Michael “Roadkill” Coffman on the secrets of cooking with roadkill outside Lawrence, Kansas. “I ain’t gonna brake ´til I see God!” —driver named “Red Dog,” taking the track at a figure-eight school bus race in Bithlo, Florida.
“It’s a gift; you either got it or you don’t.” —Lee Wheelis, world watermelon-seed-spitting champion, Luling, Texas. “I am the mayor, the board, the secretary-treasurer, the librarian, the bartender —that’s my most important title —the cook, the floor sweeper, the police chief, and I have the books for the cemetery, if someone wants to buy a plot.” —Elsie Eiler, the sole citizen of Monowi, Nebraska. Celebrated roving correspondent for CBS News Sunday Morning and bestselling author Bill Geist serves up a rollicking look at some small-town Americans and their offbeat ways of life.
“In rural Kansas, I asked our motel desk clerk for the name of the best restaurant in the area. After mulling it over, he answered: ‘I'd have to say the Texaco, 'cuz the Shell don't have no microwave.’”
Throughout his career, Bill Geist’s most popular stories have been about slightly odd but loveable individuals. Coming on the heels of his 5,600-mile RV trip across our fair land is Way Off the Road, a hilarious and compelling mix of stories about the folks featured in Geist’s segments, along with observations on his twenty years of life on the road. Written in the deadpan style that has endeared him to millions, Geist shares tales of eccentric individuals, such as the ninety-three-year-old pilot-paperboy who delivers to his far-flung subscribers by plane; the Arizona mailman who delivers mail via horseback down the walls of the Grand Canyon; the Muleshoe, Texas, anchorwoman who delivers the news from her bedroom (occasionally wearing her bathrobe); and the struggling Colorado entrepreneur who finds success employing a sewer vacuum to rid Western ranchers of problematic prairie dogs. Geist also takes us to events such as the Mike the Headless Chicken Festival (celebrating an inspiring bird that survived decapitation, hired an agent, and went on the road for eighteen months) and Sundown Days in Hanlontown, Iowa, where the town marks the one day a year when the sun sets directly between the railroad tracks
Along the wacky and wonderful way, Geist shows us firsthand how life in fly-over America can be odd, strangely fascinating, hysterical, and anything but boring.
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    Way Off the Road, the funny side of life, 2008-12-24 If you are a fan of Bill Geist's humor on CBS's Sunday Morning TV show, you will enjoy his trip down memory lane. Not only has Bill found people and events documenting off-beat human creativity (ie, the tiny town 2 blocks long where the "parade" stands still and the spectators circle around it), he has rewarded us with his keen observations of human behavior. Many of these small towns survive only because they are known for a certain wacky celebration. He also gives us insights of the frantic schedule and crummy meals he endures to reward us with those relaxed, funny Sunday Morning reports.Way Off the Road: Discovering the Peculiar Charms of Small Town America
    Off the road and a little off beat., 2008-10-06 Bill Geist is a traveling man, and has been for more than twenty years. Apparently, he'll go just about anywhere there's something that's whacky, offbeat, downright funny, or even somewhat puzzling, such as the Frozen Dead Guy Festival in Nederland, Colorado. Once there, he always has something funny to say about whatever he thinks is funny, often in an irreverent, oblique, or mystical way.
Best known as the off-road humorist for CBS News Sunday Morning, he is also a widely read author, and his book Way Off the Road details some of his recent adventures. In addition to the aforementioned frozen dead guy, there's The Church of the Holy Barbecue in Huntsville, Texas, and a woman in Wisconsin who makes her living as a portrait photographer, only her subjects are exclusively cows. There's also a festival in Whalan, Minnesota, where the parade stands still and the spectators walk around it. Why, you ask? Because the town is only two blocks long, so if the parade moved, it would be over as soon as it began. You're probably beginning to get the picture of what Bill Geist thinks is funny.
Way Off the Road is light, breezy entertainment, chopped up into small segments perfectly suited to those readers who have only a few minutes at a time to read, whoever they may be. It's not as funny as watching him do his goofy stories on TV, but then, what is?
    On the Road Again, 2008-07-25 There are some books that are not, and will never be, classics. Nevertheless, in their own way they have a certain charm and make for enjoyable reading. This particular book will put a smile on your face and even make you laugh a few times as the author explores some of the more unusual, if not bizarre, spots (and people) in the United States. Some reviewers have claimed that Geist looks down at these folks---I strongly disagree. If anything, there is a certain affection for them. Of course, this type of book, and the people in them, will not appeal to New Yorkers, since it deals with "fly over country."
    Getting your windshield cleaned by three hookers, 2008-07-04 Author Bill Geist is a traveling correspondent for "CBS News Sunday Morning". I haven't watched the show in ages. Perhaps I should as we tend to lose sight of how charming and beguiling Americana can be in the face of strident criticism by those, some home-grown, who tear the country down.
WAY OFF THE ROAD is a compendium of twenty-eight profiles of small town oddities originally offered by Geist on the TV broadcast over the period 1996-2005. Of course, getting there spawns its own set of stories, which are interspersed among the others in four chapters: "Flying There", "Staying There", "Eating There", and "Driving There."
For a retired couple with an RV and time to kill, this book might provide a roadmap for whiling away a year or two on the open road visiting the New Zion Missionary Baptist Church Barbecue (Huntsville, TX), the Watermelon-Seed Spit World Championship (Luling, TX), the Tow Truck Museum and Hall of Fame (Chattanooga, TN), the Boat-In Worship (Syracuse, IN), the Paskowitz Surf Camp (San Onofre, CA), the Frozen Dead Guy Days festival (Nederland, CO), the Sundown Days festival (Hanlontown, IA), or the Figure 8 School Bus Races (Bithlo, FL). Of course, America is also its individual citizens, like cow photographer Kathy DeBruin (New Glarus, WI), Mayor Elsie Eiler (Minowi, NE, population 1), Moonburger chef Helen Tuttle (Moonshine, IL, population 2), or the UFO aficionados Pat and Joe Travis (Rachel, NV).
It almost makes me want to give up the old 9 to 5 right now, load up the wife and unread books in a Winnebago, and set out to see it all. Well, I might have to leave the wife off to do the shopping while getting the windshield windexed by three hookers at Sheri's Ranch (Pahrump, NV).
My only picky-picky quarrel with Geist is the barely adequate photo section, which is four half-pages of snaps not much larger than oversized postage stamps.
For me, the litmus test for any travel essay is its ability to compel me, out of curiosity, to go onto the Web to further research the places written about. In the case of WAY OFF THE ROAD, I remained on-line throughout.
    Antidote to a dreary day, 2008-01-06
Someone gave me this book as a Christmas present because I travel in an RV, which Geist did on his 5,600 mile road trip across the country, gathering stories of small town America. I guess they gave me this book thinking Geist a kindred spirit, but the photo on the cover made me wince because he looks so goofy and the story excerpts on the back cover seemed so lame, which they are. But when I read the book I laughed in spite of myself, not at the stories, which are too Ma-and-Pa Kettle-ish, but at Bill's sarcastic asides and self-deprecating humor. You can't help but like him.
I'm embarrassed to say I'd never heard of Bill Geist, probably because I rarely watch television. But I'm glad I finally met him. The stories serve as a background for his witty comments that are very, very funny. His book is a perfect antidote for a dreary day.
The reason for the 3 stars is that the story collection itself seems forced and contrived. Surely, one can find humor in America without resuscitating Gomer and Goober Pyle.
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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 973.930207 EAN: 9780767922739 ISBN: 0767922735 Label: Broadway Manufacturer: Broadway Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 256 Publication Date: 2008-05-06 Publisher: Broadway Release Date: 2008-05-06 Studio: Broadway |
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