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Turn Left At The Trojan Horse: A Would-Be Hero's American Odyssey
 
 
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Turn Left At The Trojan Horse: A Would-Be Hero's American Odyssey [Paperback]

Brad Herzog (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 2010
Turn Left at the Trojan Horse has been described as On the Road meets Eat, Pray, Love because it goes well beyond a road trip. More than just a funny and profound narrative of Brad Herzog's cross-country trek toward a college reunion in Ithaca (New York) and more than another reimagining of Odysseus's ancient journey (he visits places like Troy, OR... Iliad, MT... Apollo, PA...), it is a memoir exploring the parameters of a heroic existence - by chronicling the lives of people in America's oft-ignored spaces, by examining the universal truths embedded in ancient myths, and by undertaking a fair bit of self-evaluation. It is the memoir of an Everyman searching for the hero within.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The author takes a circuitous route east from California by driving an RV across Oregon, Washington, Montana, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and other points between and beyond. Inspired by Odysseus and a cast of supporting gods and goddesses, vignettes illuminate some form of heroic action, with Herzog discovering attributes of bravery and endurance in a variety of everyday characters. The author asks "What is a hero?" and finds answers in sources such as the 1997 North Dakota flood, and Sparta, Wisconsin, home to Fort McCoy, where he ponders military life, drawing parallels with Odysseus and his wife Penelope, "a de facto single mother, her husband essentially missing in action until she hears from him next." Points of interest that inspire Herzog include the Mount Olympus Water and Theme Park at the Wisconsin Dells and an Ohio eatery called Pandora's Lunch Box, which allows him to tell the entertaining tale of the original Pandora. And after meandering around Pennsylvania's eternally burning mine fire in Centralia, he takes on labyrinthine history with an Appalachian labyrinth owner who claims to possess multiple personalities, just another character on another pit stop along an intriguing excursion.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"Herzog's third travel memoir follows the highways cross-country examining the idea of the hero along the way. He captures stunning details of the American landscape. The hero's return, is irresistible...a near-perfect ending." --Kirkus Reviews

"This is how a quest should be done...Herzog's stitching is so good, so seamless -- he follows Odysseus' story until it becomes his own.  -- Los Angeles Times

"Herzog is that rare person blessed with an innovative spirit and creative mind, persistence in pinpointing the heart of the issue . . . and skill in applying his reflections to paper." --Houston Chronicle

"Herzog is the perfect travel companion: funny, wise and as good a storyteller as you'll find. You can't help but want to spend a month in his passenger seat after reading this book." --Chad Millman, author of The Detonators and The Odds

"Thank you Brad Herzog for taking me on a great cross-country journey. To quote another storyteller, his words winged like arrows to the mark." --AJ Jacobs, author of The Guinea Pig Diaries and The Year of Living Biblically

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Citadel (June 1, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0806532025
  • ISBN-13: 978-0806532028
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #301,200 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

ABOUT BRAD HERZOG

Brad Herzog is the author of more than two-dozen books for children and four titles for adults, including three critically acclaimed travel memoirs about his travels through small-town America. His first travel narrative, STATES OF MIND, rose to #2 on the Amazon.com bestseller list. Brad's series of children's alphabet books for Sleeping Bear Press include S IS FOR SAVE THE PLANET, which was a finalist in the National "Best Books 2009" Awards and won a Mom's Choice Award.

As a freelance magazine writer, Brad has been honored several times by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE), including a Grand Gold Medal for best feature article of the year. He has been interviewed on "The Today Show" and "Oprah" and has been profiled in publications ranging from People magazine to Reader's Digest. Brad (www.bradherzog.com) lives in California with his wife and two sons.

 

Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Delivering the Good(s) about Small Town America - an On/Off the Road Epic Tale, June 6, 2010
By 
L. C. Henderson (Velddrift, South Africa) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Turn Left At The Trojan Horse: A Would-Be Hero's American Odyssey (Paperback)
Frankly, after encountering Paul Theroux's well-written travelogues of life on the road, I never again expected to find another travel writer who appealed to me more - that was until I started reading Brad Herzog's Turn Left at the Trojan Horse. Herzog's third travelogue, which follows on States of Mind and Small World, takes one on a well-illustrated road journey across America all the way from Seattle, Washington to Ithaca, New York. But this is no mere travel guide, as the author's concerns range widely from death and immortality, to individual and corporate leadership, and friendship and self-awareness, among countless other topics.


Sometimes irreverent, always witty, and even occasionally punning, Herzog is not shy of telling the odd joke. Master of a self-deprecatory style, he succeeds in revealing his own shortcomings, of both a physical and intellectual nature (the latter which the skill of his own writing totally refutes). Probing deeply into those whom he meets along the way, Herzog focuses on the inner workings of those whom he meets, so that the work is much more than a travelogue of places that are slightly off the beaten track, but more an exploration and unpicking of what makes America so exceptional - the individuals who, with their pioneering spirit, conquer all adversity to soar above the mundane into the realms of the metaphysical. He penetrates the core of what makes society tick, in terms of the conglomerate of personalities who form the backbone of the nation.

Reminiscent in parts of John Steinbeck's Travels with Charley, Turn Left at the Trojan Horse is filled with down home common sense. Only fleeting reference is made to road and weather conditions, just enough to keep the reader on track of the author's progress through the changing landscape. Such descriptions enable Herzog to focus in on one of his primary concerns, a desire to explore qualities of the human psyche, relating the qualities found in those whom he encounters with those of mythical heroes and heroines in terms of both their failings and achievements. In an age in which much of mythology, that used to be force-fed into youngsters alongside the classics, is no longer the basic staple of a scholar's diet, Brad Herzog brings the doings of those on Mount Olympus to the level of everyday humanity whom he encounters in his travels across America.

In keeping with those in whose footsteps Herzog treads, such as the pioneering Lewis and Clark, dangers abound, no matter whether it is Brad's precipice-hugging drive down to Troy in his Winnebago Aspect, or his sitting upfront in a canoe steered by a pot-smoking reprobate. Yet home itself is always just around the corner, whether in Brad's revelations about his own life and home, or in the heart-warming anecdotes of the often whimsy-driven individuals whom he meets along the way.

No stranger to Hicksville, Herzog revels in small-town gossip that reveals so much of small town life. The broad-minded tolerance that he encounters in such places belies any vision that one might otherwise have of the antagonism that is sometimes reflected in the movie moguls' depiction of such a lifestyle (think only of John Boorman's epic movie of such a counter-culture in Deliverance, and you get the picture).

Citing philosophers, both ancient and modern, Hertzog displays his erudition so succinctly and smoothly that the reader glides along, absorbing a wealth of information with a minimum of effort. The vibrancy of the text scintillates with meaning and veracity - in short, there is no room for pedantic self-importance here, with Herzog at times reminding one of an amiable and affable modern-day Americanized version of the delightfully eccentric Mr. Chips. He is, after all, master of the literary device, including the anti-climax.

A book of tragedies and home truths, Turn Left at the Trojan Horse is a poetic rendition of fact. In addition, the work is extremely well edited - there are no trivialities here, with each part adding yet additional substance to the synchronized whole. The fluency of Herzog's writing is as smooth as well-churned butter and as pithy as the fibrous knots on an aged tree.

My only regret about the book is that it contains no index - I would have loved to have seen one referring to all the classical figures, place names and characters that Herzog meets along the way. What would also have been most helpful in this cross-country expedition would have been a map showing the author's progress cross-state and county, indicating all his stop-off points.

Herzog's stylish and elegant prose carries you along, swept up in the pace, so that you find yourself crying over every tale of pathos and rejoicing over the slightest victory. The sense of boyish enthusiasm with which Herzog embarks on all his adventures is counter-balanced by his possession of a maturity beyond his years. While Herzog's journalistic background allows him to provide graphic accounts of natural disasters, including the havoc caused by the Grand Forks floods and by the tornado that swept through Siren in 2001, his maverick tendencies enable him to intentionally set out to praise the merit-worthy and to describe the generally overlooked.

Whether you finish reading this volume sniggering away to yourself or in pensive reflection depends on you, but that the work is likely to leave you entertained, amused and deeply wondering about the habits and idiosyncrasies of modern-day rural Americans is certain. In brief, Brad Herzog's Turn Left at the Trojan Horse is a rollicking grand adventure, and one not to be missed! (Reviewer for Bookpleasures.com)


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An education in life, art, travel and history! What a ride., July 31, 2010
This review is from: Turn Left At The Trojan Horse: A Would-Be Hero's American Odyssey (Paperback)
I read an excerpt of Brad's book after learning about it on an RV travel site. After two pages I turned on my trusty Nook and bought it. What a pleasure to read and at the same time causing me to expand my resource library. Within 50 pages I needed Homer's books to reference and with Brad's knowledge of words I needed my well worn dictionary. Don't get me wrong, this is avarice to my mind and learning. I have become a full time RV traveler and revel in the little stops along the highways of America, what a rich country we are gifted to live in.

Ultimately, I contacted Brad and thanked him for such a wonderful book. I have recommended it to all my friends and mentioned it on my personal web page on travel.

Now I have to buy Brad's other books and expand my horizons. Thanks Brad, one great ride next to a great wordsmith!

So, what's next? How about a southern trip?

John Coleman
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent!, July 21, 2010
By 
D. Sherman (Santa Barbara, CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Turn Left At The Trojan Horse: A Would-Be Hero's American Odyssey (Paperback)
For years, I have read the alumni magazine of Cornell, and every couple issues I would find a fantastic article, usually about some quixotic soul with a unique talent, history, or perspective. After a while, I realized they were always written by Brad Herzog, and I've been a fan of his writing ever since. I loved "States of Mind" and my affection for his writing only grew with "Turn Left at the Trojan Horse."

His eye for detail, his capacity for words, his ability to relate modern and classical contexts, and his refreshing self-examination combined for a unique, and meaningful read. If you are like me, reading "Turn Left," will lead to reminiscences of road trips, reflections on the question at the heart of the book "what is a hero?" and an appreciation for how looking back can help one look forward.
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