One for the Road: Local Girl Makes History

Like yesterday’s selection, today’s book pick comes via a San Francisco book store. Local Girl Makes History: Exploring Northern California’s Kitsch Monuments is a unique title that grabbed my eye while browsing the City Lights website. The famous SF bookseller is also the publisher of this niche kitsch guide to Northern Cali’s special structures. Author Dana Frank is a Bay area historian who takes a series of local daytrips to places she has visited since her youth, uncovering secrets and exploring urban myths of popular spots like the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk’s Cave Train Ride and the Puglas Water Temple.

The result is a smart and funny memoir mixed with historical research and reflections on politics and culture too. From the publisher:

Full of surprises and plot twists along the way, her adventures are quirky, fun and informative. The tension between private memory and public history draws us deeper and deeper into each investigation, and small places in California come to symbolize larger political questions in the United States.

Frank’s collection of essays is accompanied by photos, maps, and driving directions, producing a nice combo of memoir complete with practical guidebook details to boot! She’ll be appearing at City Lights in early January to talk about the book.

New guide identifies land objects seen from your airplane window

Here’s another one to file under, “It’s about frickin’ time.”

America from the Air is a 352-page book loaded with aerial photographs of the United States. What’s the big deal about that, you ask? Well, this particular book is designed to be used as a flying resource companion for those who like to stare out the window when they fly but have no idea what they’re staring at.

America from the Air is organized by flight so that a person flying from New York to Seattle, for example, can consult the book and identify the strange objects and geological formations along the route, 30,000 feet below. And, not only that, but authors Daniel Mathews and James Jackson provide detailed explanations for some of the more fascinating landmarks.

I simply love this idea. I usually keep my nose pressed to the Plexiglas the rare times I get a window seat and spend most of my flight wondering what the Hell I’m looking at. Now I’ll finally know–although I’d opt for the accompanying CD-ROM version to plug into my laptop instead of lugging the book around (as suggested by the fine folks at Wired Magazine).

For an example of what to expect, click here.

One for the Road: Street World

From Get Lost Books list of suggested holiday gift-giving titles comes Street World: Urban Art from Five Continents, a collection of street scenes that stretches from Mumbai to Los Angeles. The colorful hardcover is divided into more than 50 topics and includes over 500 photographs of artistic public displays from around the world.

Street World celebrates subculture creativity in all its forms: graffiti, skateboarding and bike messengering, DJing, offbeat fashion, gang life, music, as well as design, photography, and other more traditional visual art. The 400-page book looks at the artistic expressions of fashionistas, biker gangs, guerrilla gardeners, urban knitters and more. It’s the perfect gift for all your traveling culture vulture pals.

One for the Road: Instant Gratification

Gadling goddess Adrienne Wilson hasn’t written here in awhile, because she’s been super busy traveling the world and…making a book! As she explains in detail on her personal blog, Instant Gratification is a first volume of photographs from Adrienne’s growing collection of global snapshots, many taken during her travels over the past seven years.

In her own words, Adrienne explains the project: In its simplest form, Instant Gratification: Photos for your Coffee Table in Exchange for Money in my Pocket, can be described as a travel catalog comprised of a spirited mixture of color, B&W, film, digital, and lomo shots from around the globe. Feel gratified at once for once!

But there’s a hook! She then goes on to explain the super-cool generosity behind the creation of this book: Additionally, there won’t be any money placed into my pocket from your purchase of this book. Since I don’t bake cookies, I’m using this book as a fund raising tool. All the profit will be donated to a charitable organization that seeks to eliminate poverty housing and homelessness from the world, and to make decent shelter a matter of conscience and action.

Actually, all profit from book sales will go towards a Global Village build Adrienne is planning to lead next year with Habitat for Humanity. To raise funds for the service experience, she used her smarts to create a fundraising tool that puts a beautiful book in the hands of those who give. A creative masterpiece that benefits more than the buyer — instant gratification for all, and a wonderful idea. Kudos and congrats to Adrienne on her do-good self-publishing venture. (By the way, she used Blurb, and has lots of great things to say about them too.)

One for the Road: Bad Trips

Feel free to complain about today’s pick — a title from the archives — but I just felt like following up a Head Trip with a collection of Bad Trips. Fact is, this semi-ancient anthology received lukewarm reviews, but we’re going to feature it today anyway — some of you may still fancy a go at it: Bad Trips, originally published in 1991, is followed by this rather long and not-so-good subtitle: a sometimes terrifying, sometimes hilarious collection of writing on the perils of the road.

I learned about the book over at one of my favorite new blogs, where the map on the cover was the focus of discussion. Looking closer at the content, we learn that it’s a quirky collection of stories about disaster, danger and discomfort on the road. Authors are out of their element in many of these tales: Umberto Eco in a tacky hotel in Southern California, Jonathan Raban on a brief trip through the squalor of Louisiana, and Anita Desai on a frigid, midwinter sojourn to a Norwegian island.

Although it might not be the best travel anthology out there, with contributors like these, as well as other familiar names like Jan Morris, Redmond O’Hanlon and John Updike, I’m sure the tales are engaging and well done. Besides that, they are supposed to be bad anyway!