With Roadside Attractions: Cool Cafés, Souvenir Stands, Route 66 Relics, & Other Road Trip Fun
But "from Astroland to Gatorama and the Madonna Inn to the Oregon Vortex" would be more appropriate. I estimate the book contains information on roughly 350 off-beat meccas for those of us to whom the term "tourist trap" carries no negative connotation.
And it is of tourist traps I often dream...and so do you, I bet.
Some books are good mostly for dreaming as the wonders they portray are largely gone. Sven Kirsten's The Book Of Tiki
And this brings me to what I call the "wishbook factor" - the degree to which reading a travel book reminds me of perusing the Sears Christmas Catalog "Wishbooks" when I was a kid. We had quite a few Sears Wishbooks from previous years back then, and my friends and I would pine for that Marx playset or G.I. Joe space capsule no longer manufactured.
Great subculture books, be they about travel, tiki, googie or toys, have a high wishbook factor. You really luck out as a reader when a travel book with such a high factor happens to be about stuff we can still see.
And that's what the Butko's have delivered with Roadside Attractions
Ah yes, the Fan Favorite sidebars...
Scattered through the book are sidebars written by various travel and roadside architecture authors and such. What karmic pay-off placed us in their company, I'll never know. Ace's sidebar is on page 112. The picture is from our visit to the Wigwam Motel in Rialto, California. The friend quoted is Patsy Terrell.
I'm particularly happy that some of the other commentators are folks whose works have informed and entertained me as I plan my own travels. Among them:
Doug Kirby, Ken Smith and Mike Wilkins, authors of New Roadside America
Alan Hess, author of Googie Redux: Ultramodern Roadside Architecture
Photographer John Margolies and writer Maria Reidelbach are two-thirds of the team that put together one of my favorite wish books, Miniature Golf
Margolies admires the "best darned trained bear show" of New Hampshire's Clark's Trading Post. Reidelbach instills hunger for Homestead, Florida's Fruit and Spice Park, where you can "nosh your way through" treats offered by 500 varieties of plants.
agilitynut.com webmaster Debra Jane Seltzer, with whom I enjoy trading notes on fiberglass and sputniky wonders, laments for the "unforgivably demolished" Trade Winds Restaurant of Oxnard, California - a tiki attraction.
Bill Griffith, cartoonist of Zippy the Pinhead, admires the "art, surrealism and fine dining" of the Top Dog mobile hot dog stand. (I'd really like to discuss my theory with Zippy - that giant sputnik balls are actually transmitters beaming data collected by muffler men to an alien headquarters hidden in the Encounter Lounge - Zippy would believe me; I know he would.)
On a more Earthly plane, three of the commentators are folks I met this summer at the National Route 66 Festival.
Jerry McClanahan, author of Route 66: EZ66 Guide for Travelers
Jim Ross, author of Oklahoma Route 66
Shellee Graham, author of Tales From the Coral Court: Photos & Stories from a Lost Route 66 Landmark
The book is well indexed and contains a list of applicable websites and other contact information in back. Speaking of which, we need to get back to reading and planning trips.
Touristic Nirvanas don't photograph themselves, you know.
Ace Jackalope wonders how much butter he'll need for the Corn Palace.
I just bought the book and am looking forward to reading it. Nice to see that Ace was included. Your blog is brilliant and Ace is ace.
ReplyDeleteDarn!
ReplyDeleteCow lived within 20 miles of Rialto and not only never saw the teepee motel,
but,
more importantly,
missed Ace's visit there!
(Nice sidebar, Ace!)
Moo!
Woo Hoo!!!! Congrats Ace! I will have to get this book! I have many RA books as well as Weird NY and Indiana Curiosities! Yay!
ReplyDelete