Saturday, April 30, 2011

US Route 6; "Creating the Mythology"

I was sitting at a luncheon table with award-winning author/filmmaker, Steven Beschloss this afternoon at the ASJA (American Society of Journalists and Authors) conference in New York City earlier today.  We were discussing our various writing projects.  His - a new book; Adrift - Charting our Course Back to a Great Nation, is coming out in July.  Mine, of course, is my Route 6 trip and this blog.  I mentioned that I was basically UN-political, pointing to my very purple shirt with pride.  "I'll be driving through blue states and red states and this is the blended color I hope to see," I laughed.  Steven grinned and quipped - "You're creating a mythology around Route 6, the same as has been done with Route 66."

That's an interesting take on my humble project.  As I see it,  I'm just driving along one long road and writing about what I see, what I eat, who I meet and where I sleep. If a mythology creeps up around it, that's for others to interpret.  I'll be cruising along US Route 6, but, with all contacts I've established along the way,  I certainly won't be adrift.  

2 comments:

  1. I'm not sure an old road has to have a mythology to be interesting. Sometimes its history, or even the charm of the places through which it passes, are plenty.

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  2. Because it's still less famous than its twinned sister (Route 66), the stories that come from it - or are told about it - hold the potential of a seemingly new discovery around each curve, over each hill. Each traveler a pioneer traveling into the great big world of America. Thanks for sharing your experiences along this beautiful highway!

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