Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Riding Toward Everywhere

Uneven tracks in Western New York
I am staying busy and not having the time to do much writing these days and I feel guilty for not checking on everyone's blogs like I should.  I keep saying that things will lighten up, but I don't see that happening until mid-summer (and we'll see what happens then).  Anyway, I still read and recently wrote this book review of one of my favorite topics--trains.  The photo on the right I found recently when looking back at photos from the early 90s.  I was trying to find a photo of a friend's boats and came across these tracks, taken near Wyoming, NY, if I remember correctly.  The tracks are not straight, but are used, only the trains are limited to 10 mph. 



William T. Vollmann, Riding Toward Everywhere (HarperCollins, 2008), 206 pages plus 65 pages of black and white photographs.


I picked up this book at a used bookstore right before Christmas and thought I’d read it on my train trip out west after Christmas, but forgot about it and only recently did I get around to reading it.  I am still not sure what to make of Vollmann’s ramblings.  This book is a collection of Vollmann’s memories of “unauthorized” rail travel, loosely complied into chapters of similar themes.   In his travels, he’s searching for “everywhere” or the mystical “Cold Mountain,” a place named by a Chinese poet.

Vollmann is a modern day hobo, albeit a part-time one.  Being a part-timer has its advantages such as credit cards and the ability when things get too uncomfortable to hop off near an Amtrak station and buy a ticket home or to check into a hotel, clean up and head out on the town for the evening.  It also allows him the luxury to travel to locations to begin his travels such as when he flew to Cheyenne, Wyoming to hobo back to California (he only made it to Salt Lake City, before flying home).  Jack London, in his 1893 hobo expedition across the country, had recalled that Cheyenne was a tough city to hop a freight train and Vollmann decided to see if anything had changed in the past century.   Vollmann often draws upon the hobo writings of London and Jack Kerouac as well as the writings of Mark Twain, Thomas Wolfe and Ernest Hemingway.  

All of Vollmann’s travels are in the American West.  The way he describes the smell of sage or the stars on a western night makes me homesick (for my adopted home).  Some of the travels he made have been over tracks that I’ve covered (but I was a paying passenger in the comfort of an Amtrak coach).   He begins telling about traveling the coastal route that runs from Oakland to Los Angeles, a route that left me with bittersweet memories (see my blog post). 

As I would expect with hobos, Vollmann seems to have a problem with authority, whether it is security forces at airports or “railroad bulls,” and he often slips in digs about them.  The railroad has never taken kindly to people hitching rides on trains, but in the day of terrorists (and few open boxcars), it’s even worst.  However, Vollmann leaves the reader with the impression that the “bulls” at Burlington Northern’s yards are more lenient than those at Union Pacific’s yards.   The scene Vollmann recalled of hopping  a freight with two of his friends, each of whom had  a cell phone and kept the other abreast of the location of the security men and the places to hop onto an open box car made me wonder if they should really be called hobos.

“There are two things that put a man on a train,” Vollmann quotes a modern day hobo, “a woman or a war.”  Vollmann discusses the mythic women hobos, as well as discussing the topic of woman among hobos and how they depict the female gender in graffiti inside box cars.  He also gives insight into a number of modern hobos.  There are two types of hobos, according to one of Vollmann’s hobo confidants, those who have nothing and those who want to be on the rails.  Obviously Vollmann and his friends fell into the second category.  Of course, did Vollmann really ride the rails as he provides a "legal disclaimer" at the beginning of the book, suggesting that the stories are really hearsay and his photographs are really drawings.  

A hobo has never had a glamorous life, but it has to be tougher today.  There are few open box cars in which one can wedge the door open and enjoy riding the across the country.  Most of Vollmann’s rides were on the “porches” at the end of grain hoppers, a seat that’s open to the elements and visible to security men.  Furthermore, trains today go further without stopping, requiring the modern hobo to be prepared with water and food and warm clothing.

If you enjoy trains and have ever thought about what it would be like to hop a freight, this is a good read.  I would also recommend reading Jack Kerouac’s  On the Road and Dhama Bums and Jack London’s The Road.   




17 comments:

  1. The distance involved in the US changes the meaning of the term train travel for those of us from any part of Europe. India, or perhaps the Argentine. You see the rails never tied things together in that physical way they did in the States. They changed the concept of time. We've had to await the advent of low-cost air travel to approach a similar concept.
    View the destinations of the third-class passengers on the RMS Titanic and you see what I'm on about.

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    1. There are some trains in India that come close to being as long as US trains and certainly in Russia you truly have long distant trains.

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    2. My error; I left that sentence hanging about India.
      In India as with the States the rails tied the diversity together after a fashion. In Europe not so much. It was who and where in the social strata that moved. It has taken this length of time for those below the very top to have the that ability to move.

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  2. Trains? Do you ever watch the Big Bang Theory? You might be channeling Sheldon from that show. Or maybe he is channeling you.

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  3. Sage: I can't even imagine the nightmarish existence of a hobo anywhere today, but especially on trains! An interesting review!!!

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    1. I agree, it would be a nightmare... That's not much romantic about it at all

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  4. I do enjoy trains, not so much the idea for myself to actually hop a freight, but I find the story of those who really do quite fascinating. I used to listen to a very down to earth DJ (he was not into anything high-tech) he interviewed many a hobo and knew some quite well beginning from his days growing up when they actually got a free meal from his own mother. I am curious about this book, or maybe the author, and I just might enjoy too. Mostly for the unknown adventure of it all. You always find the best stories to share, thanks. Enjoy some fun time in your week too, okay!

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  5. I love trains, tracks and everything associated with railroads. As a kid, I often dreamed of hopping a box car to see where it would take me.

    Alas, we get older.

    Cheers.

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    1. I'm not sure what it is about trains and kids, but they have a way of catching our imagination

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  6. I totally echo Vince, in that it is hard for me to grasp the vast distances these trains transversed, it's quite mind blowing really.

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    1. but you can catch a train in England and ride rails all the way to Saigon (I've done it in reverse)... Now that's a long trip!

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  7. Hmmm - I could see why this week would be busy for you. I always love when you post about trains.

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  8. nice...i will def be adding this one to the list to read...i jumped a train once....

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  9. Greetings, thanks for stopping by my TP post for Carmi....and I mentioned posting that link with the cutest owl ever, here it is and you too can sail with us all! ha ! ha!

    http://twincitiesblather.blogspot.com/2012/04/alphabe-thursday-things-around.html

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