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The Lost Continent : Travels in Small-Town America

The Lost Continent : Travels in Small-Town America

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Author: Bill Bryson
Publisher: Doubleday Canada, Limited
Category: Book

Buy Used: $3.30



Used (6) from $3.30

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 288 reviews
Sales Rank: 3310915

Format: Import
Media: Paperback
Pages: 352
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1

ISBN: 0385658613
Dewey Decimal Number: 910
EAN: 9780385658614
ASIN: 0385658613

Publication Date: 2002
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Similar Items:

  • I'm a Stranger Here Myself: Notes on Returning to America After 20 Years Away
  • Neither Here nor There: Travels in Europe
  • In a Sunburned Country
  • A Short History of Nearly Everything
  • Made in America

Customer Reviews:   Read 283 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars The Lost Continent   December 31, 2008
The Lost Continent drives the reader through small town America. Told with a sense of humor and attention to detail, Bryson makes the reader feel like they are riding in the passengers seat as he drives from one town to another. As he drives into familiar towns, he shares his reflections on how life was and how it has changed over time. An interesting read for someone who enjoys long cross country road trips.


1 out of 5 stars Bill Bryson finally fizzles and sputters out   November 30, 2008
I am a fan of Bill Bryson. I simply loved his Short History of Nearly Everything and In a Sunburned Country. Just awesome stuff. Reread both several times. I liked several other of his travel books, as well.

But this...this is just...bad. I mean seriously bad. He makes fun of darned near everything from his youth from his family on, and not in a funny, teasing, but affectionate way like Gene Shepherd had the sense and talent to do, but in a really nasty and distateful way. And it's just not funny. Nasty satire can be a guilty pleasure...like the old National Lampoon magazine managed from time to time (remember the Teddy Kennedy Volkswagon ad?), but this stuff is just...bad and boring.

I guess Mr. Bryson is just not talented as I thought, and hoped, he was.



5 out of 5 stars Side-splittingly Funny!   October 22, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'd read four Bryson books before I read this one, and this is the funniest of the lot. Irreverence and biting wit on almost every page. I've definitely had more laughs from this book than any other I've ever read.

I can only assume that the people who are giving this riveting work a meager one star are the kind of people who are more than happy to laugh at Bryson poking fun at anyone else, but when his inimitable humor is directed at them it ceases to be funny. Kinda reinforces some Bryson's observations in this excellent work.

Thoroughly recommended.



4 out of 5 stars small towns, big enjoyment   October 18, 2008
This is the third Bryson book that I've read in three months; Bill's persona has become my friend. In fact, I felt like I was in the back seat during his travels around America. I'm so old that I have been to most of the places where "we" traveled. Bryson's wit makes small town USA interesting, and sometimes sad for the "good old days" when our communities resembled our collective character. There is some disdain for big box chain stores and restaurants that dot every landscape and meld our communities into boring familiarity regardless of where we go. "We" had similar feelings about most of the places. I enjoyed the ride. "We" laughed a lot.


1 out of 5 stars Only read this book if you want to develop and intense dislike for the author   September 27, 2008
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

I gave this book one star only because Amazon doesn't allow the option to select zero stars.

My husband and I have read and enjoyed many of Bill Bryson's books. In the past, we considered him one of our favorite writers. After reading this book, it will be a long time before I open another of his works.

Mr Bryson's petty criticisms of the small towns through which he drove and his obvious contempt for all things Southern will leave any American who loves her country feeling a deep disdain for all things Bryson. While reading this book, there were many times my husband and I would look at one another and ask, "What could have happened to him to make a man from the Midwest develop such a negative view of all things American?" and "Do you think this book was REALLY written by 'our' Bill Bryson?" (BTW, we no longer consider him 'our' Bill Bryson.)

I mentioned that Mr Bryson 'drove through' small towns in America because that's exactly what he describes in the book. After a quick, judgmental glimpse of a town, he bypasses it altogether as totally unworthy of his time, money, or attention.

Bryson didn't bother to visit many of the historical attractions along the way. Apparently, he was on a very tight budget. He DID, after all, borrow his mother's old Chevette for the journey. The cost of admission to these sites require him to cut back on his beloved beer and chicken-fried steak.

Last, but definitely not least, Mr Bryson showed himself to be a bigot. His contempt for 'all things white and all things Southern' along with his propensity for revisiting every bit of negative racial history every recorded during his BRIEF drive through the deep South demonstrated just how out of touch he is with the country of his birth and his, obvious, disdain for truth. He chose to ignore any progress made in race relations during the past 40 years. He chose to see, and share, his view that America is, and will always be, the country he would most like to see in 'his rearview mirror'. I, for one, welcome him to return to his country of choice and not bother to darken the doors of the home I love. The last thing the United States of American needs is one more person to describe our country in such negative terms.


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