Roads From the Ashes: An Odyssey in Real Life on the Virtual Frontier
Trade Paperback
From the publisher's website:
When a wildfire destroyed her home and worldly possessions in the
hills above Los Angeles, it didn’t take Megan Edwards long to recognize
an opportunity. It took her husband a little longer (“Give me five
minutes to grieve!”), but they were both soon planning to make the most
of their sudden “stufflessness” and hit the road. They did so a few
months later in a freshly built four-wheel-drive motorhome that was even
more unusual because of the office in the back instead of a bedroom.
This all happened back when “Internet” had not yet entered the lexicon
but “email” had. The mobile office would allow Edwards to file stories
with the newspapers she wrote for by cell phone. That was the idea, at
least. At the beginning of 1994, cell service was patchy, unreliable,
and expensive.
They also thought they’d be traveling for six months or so, when, they believed, they’d settle down and get back to normal. But five years and thousands of miles later, they were still on the road. In that time, they’d watched the Internet grow from a mysterious fad prized by people in remote locales into an unstoppable universal phenomenon. They started a website, RoadTripAmerica.com, to share road tripping tips and ideas. Slowly, their dream of being “at work, at home, and on the road, all at the same grand time” became a reality.
This edition marks the twentieth anniversary of Edwards’s memoir, which was first released in 1999. At its heart a story of making lemonade when life gives you lemons, this memoir is also a riveting and at times hilarious look at the early years of the World Wide Web. With a new introduction by the author and a foreword by Chris Epting, enjoy an armchair adventure across North America when the Internet was young. This e-book edition also includes 15 photos dating from when the author lived on the road.
The e-book, with color photos, is now available from these fine retailers, we hope it encourages you to “hit the road” in whatever way that means to you! A new paperback edition with black and white photos was published on March 10, 2020.
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