I have been recently reading a number of travel books, and
began in 2017 when I realized that John Steinbeck’s Travels with Charley (Viking
1962) had been published 55 years before. I reread Travels and noted, as I had
in my two previous readings, that some of the incidents that Steinbeck describes
seemed very unlikely. Indeed his oldest son, Thom, had once remarked publicly that his dad was too introverted and not good at interacting with strangers to
have had many of encounters reported along the road. He stated that his father
probably sat a lot in his pickup camper, which he named Rocinante (after Don
Quixote’s horse), doing what he did best - fictionalizing many details of his
trip.
Photos of front and back of book's dust jacket, along with the endpages map of Steinbeck's route around much of the country.
Steinbeck and Charlie at home in Sag Harbor, Long Island New York, before beginning their trip.
Since he apparently didn’t keep a detailed log
of his trip, or record tapes recounting his daily progress, nor snap photos
along the way, it is very difficult for others to try to reconstruct the
details of his trip. It is curious that Steinbeck named his pickup camper
Rocinante. In many ways Steinbeck was like Quixote at this point in his life:
awkward, past his prime, and engaged in a task that was beyond his capabilities
and personality. Regardless, Steinbeck did go off in search of America and his
book about the trip has become a true classic of travel writing, even if parts
of it were fictionalized. Thom also remarked that his father knew that his
health was deteriorating (Steinbeck died in 1968 at the age of 66), and that
the real reason for the trip was to see the country again, and to prove to
himself that he could still drive around it.
Steinbeck's steed, Rocinante, at the National Steinbeck Center in Salinas, California.
As for book collecting: copies of the first
printing of Charlie are sought after and often priced in the range $350.00 to
$750.00. The dust jacket was very fragile and was prone to sun toning over the
years, especially on the spine. The photograph of book I used above is a later
printing – the true 1st state of the jacket does not have the Nobel
prize blurb below “Steinbeck.”
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