Live from the Road
Livefrom the Road takes the reader on an often humorous,yet harrowing, journey as Meg Newton and Sally Sutton seek a change in themundane routine of their lives. “Is this all there is?” Sally asks Meg aftervisiting a dying friend in the hospital. That’s when Meg suggests they take ajourney to discover the answer. Joined by their daughters, they set off on ajourney of salvation enhanced by the glories of the Mother Road. Along the way,they are joined by a Chicago bluesman, a Pakistani liquor storeowner fromIllinois, a Marine from Missouri, a gun-toting momma from Oklahoma, and a motelclerk from New Mexico. Meg, mourning for her dead son, learns to share her painwith her daughter CC. When Sally’s husband of almost thirty years leaves avoice mail telling her he’s leaving, both Sally and her daughter Ramonadiscover some truths about love and independence.
Death, divorce and deception help to reveal theinner journey taking place under the blazing desert sun as a Route 66 motelowner reads the Bhagavad-Gita and aneagle provides the sign they’ve all been seeking. Enlightenment comes tiptoeingin at dawn in a Tucumcari laundromat, while singing karaoke at a bar in Gallup,New Mexico, and during dinner at the Roadkill Café in Seligman, Arizona. Thefour women’s lives will never be the same after the road leads them to theirhearts – the true destination for these road warriors.
The Story Behind This Book
It began one night over a couple of beers at a local bar. It took more than a year to plan and pull off. “You know what I’ve always wanted to do?” I asked my friend Joy one rainy night as we sat commiserating about our complacent lives. “I’ve always wanted to travel Route 66 from Chicago to L.A. But I’ve never found anyone who wanted to accompany me.” “You’ve found her now,” Joy said, and thus began more than a year of plotting and planning our escape from our lives for more than two weeks on the road. Romantic visions of Jack Kerouac and the open road, John Steinbeck and a dog named Charley, neon lights and roadside motels clouded our minds as the mundane details of the trip threatened to intrude on our starry-eyed dreams. Our daughters, both in their twenties, asked if they could join us. We were astounded. “Why would you want to spend your summer vacation with two middle-aged women?” I asked my daughter Anna. “It’ll be a blast,” she said. Joy’s daughter Hillary said something similar, and so we became a foursome of road warriors ready to set forth on one of the most historic roads in the world. Just the words “Route 66” conjures up visions of greasy hamburgers, neon signs flashing “No Vacancy,” characters out of a Sam Shepard play, and, of course, freedom to disappear into the gut of this country. Even though the trip occurred five years ago, I still see those visions. Of course, my journal became my companion on the trip. Serendipity and downright foolishness collided into one of the most memorable trips of my life. Soon after my return, I began writing a novel loosely based on the journey. All I had to do was take a small event from the real trip and amplify it into a golden nugget of a story. Amazingly, there were many stories that never came close to appearing in the book because they were just too outlandish to be believed. Those stories remain sacred, only to be pulled out when the four of us reunite to reminisce.