The Open Road goes to the used-car lot.
I've always romanticized the late '40s and '50s - the cars, jazz, the open roads and lack of pollution. Now there are more vehicles, less hitchhikers, more billboards and power lines and stuff. People wrote wonderful long letters that took months to receive, and now everything is email.
I published a bunch of my older books in e-book format with Open Road, which is great and has tons of hard to find older books available there.
The task of evangelism often involves preparing an open road so offenders can find their refuge in Christ.
But, I like the challenge of, "How can we stretch this out? Where can we go with it?" It's an open road, especially at Netflix. You can take it anywhere you want.
Say this is what the pain made of you: an open, open, open road, an avalanche of feel it all.
The one thing I miss is hitchhiking. Now there's no more of that. When's the last time you saw a hitchhiker? It's not that I consider it a great sport, but it was my way of seeing the country. The open road, especially in the western United States, is still very pristine, but everything else around it has changed.
The line between the white-science and the black-science is very narrow. You can open roads or you can kill people by the same dynamite!
Where is there a boy to whom the call of the wild and the open road does not appeal?
The best advice is to take it easy, respect speed limits and do not try to make up time lost in the tailbacks on the open road.
I love New York for being New York. I love L.A. for being L.A. But when it comes home, I'm a Midwest, South type of dude. I like open roads, I like to drive, and it may not be as fast, but it's definitely a place where you get to appreciate a lot more. Not saying that you don't up here, but that's not what I'm accustomed to.
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