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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book, just needed to not end so abruptly, August 23, 2009
If anyone wants a better understanding of hour their "stuff" (food, electronics, furniture, etc.) gets from point A to B so fast and cheap today, they need to read this book. It is an outstanding history, from the Depression through the 1980's, of how products were moved in this country and the political and commercial forces who helped set the rules for said movement. It explains how the Teamsters, along with New Deal politicians, set up a framework of regulated trucking routes that restricted competition and kept transport prices high. That framework was steadily eroded through an exemption in the regulation that allowed farmers to use unregulated trucks to bring their product to market. The ensuing four-and-a-half decades were spent battling over what the meaning of the words "farm products" meant in an economy increasingly dominated by consumers want for cheap products and farmers want for maximum profit in their pockets (and not truckers). Pulling on a voluminous list of citations, the author turns what could be a dry topic into one of fascinating statistics, first person accounts, and cultural references that make one feel like they are riding shotgun with a driver trying to eek out a living as "the last American cowboy".

The only reason that this book didn't receive 5 stars from me was it's abrupt ending. Once through President Carter's de-regulation era, the author attempts to sum up the last 30 years of trucking in several concluding pages. Perhaps there weren't as many primary sources as there were for earlier decades, or maybe the point of the book was to stop with Carter's actions. Whatever the reason, it seemed a bit abrupt given the volume and depth of the previous chapters. It's the one blemish in an otherwise outstanding documentary on the nearly 80 years of trucking since the Great Depression.
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5.0 out of 5 stars America through a political, social, and cultural history of trucking, August 14, 2009
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ROROTOKO (rorotoko dot com) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Trucking Country: The Road to America's Wal-Mart Economy (Politics and Society in Twentieth-Century America) (Hardcover)
"Trucking Country" is on the ROROTOKO list of cutting-edge intellectual nonfiction. Professor Hamilton's book interview ran here as cover feature on May 1, 2009.
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Trucking Country: The Road to America's Wal-Mart Economy (Politics and Society in Twentieth-Century America)
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