Snowshoeing Through Sewers: Adventures in New York City, New Jersey, and Philadelphia Contributor(s): Rockland, Michael Aaron (Author) |
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ISBN: 081354355X ISBN-13: 9780813543550 Publisher: Rutgers University Press OUR PRICE: $31.30 Product Type: Paperback Published: February 2008 Annotation: In these 10 alternately poetic and comic tales set in the New York/Philadelphia corridor--the most densely populated chunk of America--the author of Looking for America on the New Jersey Turnpike looks for adventure in the megapolis, "not where no one has been but where no one wishes to go". |
Additional Information |
BISAC Categories: - Travel | United States - Northeast - General - Travel | United States - Northeast - Middle Atlantic (nj, Ny, Pa) - Social Science |
Dewey: 917.4 |
Physical Information: 0.42" H x 5.5" W x 8.5" (0.53 lbs) 184 pages |
Themes: - Cultural Region - Mid-Atlantic - Cultural Region - Northeast U.S. - Geographic Orientation - New Jersey - Geographic Orientation - New York - Geographic Orientation - Pennsylvania - Chronological Period - 20th Century |
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc. |
Publisher Description: When Daniel Boone heard a neighbor's dog bark, he moved West. But when there's no Wild West left, where is adventure to be found? Michael Aaron Rockland looks for adventure in the megalopolis, "not where no one has been but where no one wishes to go . . . across traffic-clogged cities, the parking lots of wall-to-wall suburban malls, and the sinister waterways that seep through rusting industrial sites." In these ten alternately poetic and comic tales of adventure in the New York/Philadelphia corridor, the most densely populated chunk of America, Rockland walks and bikes areas meant only for cars and paddles through waters capable of dissolving canoes. He hikes the length of New York's Broadway, camps in New York City, treks across Philadelphia, pedals among the tractor trailers of Route 1 in New Jersey, and paddles around Manhattan and through the dark tunnels under Trenton. Whereas Henry David Thoreau built his cabin on Walden Pond to get out of town, for Rockland, the challenge is to head into town. As he writes, "in the late twentieth century, a weed and trash-filled city lot . . . may be a better place than the wilderness to contemplate one's relationship to nature." |