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Travels w/ Charley
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| -In what state did Steinbeck begin and end his drive across the U.S.? | New York |
| -Steinbeck names his custom camper after a fictional horse. What is the camper’s name? | Rocinante |
| -Steinbeck travels with his companion Charley. What type of animal is Charley? | Dog (poodle) |
| -Before Steinbeck begins his trip, what type of natural hazard impacts his home? | Hurricane Donna |
| -The winter before he begins, Steinbeck has an experience that causes him to commit to taking his cross- country journey. What is it? | Falls ill and is warned he is not as young as he used to be |
| -Steinbeck states that U.S. cities are like “badger holes”. What does he mean? | Ringed with trash, surrounded by piles of wrecked and rusting automobiles, and smothered with rubbish |
| -While traveling through New England, Steinbeck goes to roadside restaurants in order to find out what issues locals are discussing. What meal is his preferred time to visit these restaurants? | Very early in the morning |
| -As he traveled north in New England and the weather became colder, Steinbeck noticed an increasing number of advertisements for which warm-weather location? | Florida real estate |
| -While in coastal Maine, Steinbeck has a seafood dinner that he argues is the best in the world. What does he eat? | lobster |
| -In northern Maine, Steinbeck sees “mountains” of what crop | potato |
| -In northern Maine, farmers used migrant labor to pick their crops. Who were these people? | Canucks from Canada, French Canadians |
| -In northern Maine, Steinbeck discusses the numerous trucks that carry a certain resource. What are they moving? | Potatoes and potato diggers |
| -Across America Steinbeck observes that people are drawn to living in what type of place? | Crowded and polluted cities |
| -Steinbeck tells the story of meeting Joseph Alsop, a famous journalist of the time. What is the point of that story? | Even though we go to the same places our experiences can be vastly different and we all see and perceive things through different lenses |
| -Steinbeck believes that Americans are “hungry”. What are they hungry for? | History and association with the past |
| -Steinbeck plans to travel into Canada so that he could bypass major cities like Cleveland and Toledo. Why does he turn around at the U.S.-Canada border? | Charlie did not have proof of vaccines so USA wouldn’t let him back in |
| -At times, Steinbeck drives on high-speed, concrete super-highways. Although movement is at high speeds, he believes that this type of travel means | you don’t get to see anything (cultures) |
| -Steinbeck notices a new type of housing outside of the large eastern cities. He is surprised by the proliferation of: | mobile trailer homes |
| -Steinbeck contemplates the subject of roots throughout U.S. history. He believes | we come from restless people, humans have a short history of roots, hunger to be somewhere else |
| -Steinbeck hasn’t visited the Middle West for a long time. While driving through Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois he notices | enormous increase in population, powerful electric energy |
| -In one of his Midwest chapters, Steinbeck discusses someone who refers to “the Sticks”. What does this term mean? | Living out in the middle of nowhere |
| -In the novel, the character “Lonesome Harry” is | a businessman/husband traveling to Chicago, very lonely has a lady over |
| -In which northern city does Steinbeck take a break from his journey and spend several days with his wife? | Chicago |
| -Steinbeck had never traveled to Wisconsin before this trip. What are his general impressions of the state? | Lovely, quickly changing landscape |
| -Steinbeck characterizes the Wisconsin Dells | weird country sculptured by the Ice Age |
| -When Steinbeck drives through Sauk Centre, Minnesota he notes that the city is home to a famous author. Who | Sinclair Lewis |
| -As he drives west, Steinbeck visits a city that he argues is representative of middle America because it is in the crease created by a folded map. This city is | Fargo, North Dakota |
| -What observation does Steinbeck make about the food (except for breakfasts) served by roadside restaurants? | Clean, tasteless, colorless, all the same |
| -Steinbeck has a long conversation with a man who believes Steinbeck is in “the profession”. What type of job does this refer to? | The theater |
| -It isn’t in the crease where maps fold, but according to Steinbeck which city is really the boundary between eastern and western landscapes? | Missouri River in Bismarck, North Dakota |
| -In the North Dakota Bad Lands, Steinbeck initially has a strong feeling of being | unwanted in the land |
| -About which state does Steinbeck write that he is “in love”? | Montana |
| -At Yellowstone National Park, Steinbeck and Charley have several negative encounters with what type of animal? | bears |
| -As he looks at the Great Divide in Montana, Steinbeck observes that it is | too big to see, really starts as just a slope |
| When he visits Seattle, Steinbeck states that the city has experienced | a population boom |
| -Seattle, according to Steinbeck, is an example of an American city that has | neglected their downtown for urban sprawl |
| -In California, Steinbeck spends time in a forest. What type of trees does he describe as inspiring “silence and awe”? | redwoods |
| -Steinbeck has difficulty writing about his childhood home. Where is it? | Salinas, Northern California |
| -Like in the Midwest, Steinbeck notices a new type of house spreading throughout California. They are: | trailer homes |
| Steinbeck refers to one large metro area as simply “the City”. He is referring to | San Francisco |
| Steinbeck writes about the large size and sectionalism in the United States. He believes Americans are a “a new breed”. What does this mean? | People living in America have rapidly become more like the all over American identity |
| -As he turns eastward, Steinbeck becomes tired of traveling and thinking about America and Americans. He decides to spend time investigating only two more regions. They are | Texas, deep south |
| -In the Mojave Desert, Steinbeck considers shooting two animals before he reconsiders and leaves food for them to eat. What type of animal were they? | Cayote |
| Steinbeck introduces the concept of Balkanization. He states that this is the idea of | separateness of the states |
| -In New Mexico, Steinbeck celebrates Charley’s birthday. He prepared a meal of birthday: | pancakes |
| -Steinbeck describes one state as “a state of mind”, “an obsession”, and a unique “nation in every sense of the word”. This is: | Texas |
| -According to Steinbeck, which of the following was not a historical punishment for serious crimes in Virginia | Death, exile to Texas, and imprisonment |
| -Which state does Steinbeck characterize as a place “that people either passionately love”...”or passionately hate”? | Texas |
| According to Steinbeck, Texans who make a fortune typically first purchase | a ranch |
| -At Thanksgiving, Steinbeck celebrates the holiday at | friends ranch, was big party |
| -In New Orleans, Steinbeck discusses a group known as “the Cheerleaders”. They are | group of “mother” middle aged women who yell at black children for going to white schools |
| -In which state does Steinbeck encounter a “black norther” which drops ice on the highways he is traveling? | Texas |
| -Where is Steinbeck when he realizes that (mentally) his journey is over and all he wants is to be home? | Abingdon, Virginia |