I live in Emporia, KS. About four blocks north of my house, I-35 runs north to south from Canada to Mexico. Two blocks south of my house runs Highway 50, going from coast to coast. I've always loved my home, and the knowledge that I can reach literally anywhere in the country if only I have the courage to get in the car and go.
I saw this book at my library, and it looked like such an old person book but also something I would love. I have read almost all of William Least Heat-Moon's books and devoured Steinbeck's "Travels with Charley" and have come to enjoy the casual travel book, segmented into small sections and stories from the road. This book fit in well with the above-mentioned travel tomes. No chapter was longer than three pages and each location told a story about middle-class America and life on the central-most cross-continental highway (that happens to bypass major cities, making it "the loneliest road in America"). The ending was terribly abrupt, but it was neat to read a book that took place thirty years back and see how lessons from the road still apply to America today.