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THE INSTANT NUMBER ONE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER FROM THE AUTHOR OF RULES OF CIVILITY AND A GENTLEMAN IN MOSCOW 'Deserves a place alongside Kerouac, Steinbeck and Wolfe as the very best of the genre' OBSERVER 'An absolute beauty of a book. As soon as I finished it, I wanted to read it again' TANA FRENCH 'Welcome to the enormous pleasure that is The Lincoln Highway . . . in which the miles fly by and the pages turn fast' ANN PATCHETT In June, 1954, eighteen-year-old Emmett returns home to his younger brother Billy after serving fifteen months in a juvenile facility for involuntary manslaughter. They are getting ready to leave their old life behind and head out to sunny California. But they're not alone. Two runaways from the youth work farm, Duchess and Wolly, have followed Emmett all the way to Nebraska with a plan of their own, one that will take the four of them on an unexpected and fateful journey in the opposite direction - to New York City. 'Already feels like an American coming of age classic' RED 'The best novel I've read in years' CHRIS CLEAVE 'Wise and wildly entertaining . . . permeated with light, wit, youth' THE NEW YORK TIMES Review: A beautiful read - The story of life is usually the story of a chasing after a dream or running away from a nightmare. In this beautiful story the hero is putting miles from a failure of a family and being met with all the good and bad characters of the world. Lot of history too. Wooly resembles The Idiot in some ways. Like great authors there a brilliance in many places. A reasonable quality book with philosophy flowing like poetry. Review: A literary masterpiece - My first Amor Towles novel & I'm absolutely wowed! The narrative is so masterfully paced that I never once felt the weight of its length. I was simply carried along, page after page, wanting both to linger & craving to arrive. It pulls you in from the very first page & refuses to let go. Each character moves with conviction, shaped by their own moral compass, and somewhere along the highway through them you realise that life is rarely black or white — it's grey & the shade of grey you're willing to stand in. Billy, with his earnest heart & quiet wisdom, completely stole my heart ❤️ I wish there had been a little more of Sally, but perhaps that longing is part of the beauty. All in all, it is a beautiful, tender, thoughtful story — one I will cherish for a long time ✨️





| Best Sellers Rank | #34,823 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1,252 in Contemporary Fiction (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 85,347 Reviews |
A**N
A beautiful read
The story of life is usually the story of a chasing after a dream or running away from a nightmare. In this beautiful story the hero is putting miles from a failure of a family and being met with all the good and bad characters of the world. Lot of history too. Wooly resembles The Idiot in some ways. Like great authors there a brilliance in many places. A reasonable quality book with philosophy flowing like poetry.
A**A
A literary masterpiece
My first Amor Towles novel & I'm absolutely wowed! The narrative is so masterfully paced that I never once felt the weight of its length. I was simply carried along, page after page, wanting both to linger & craving to arrive. It pulls you in from the very first page & refuses to let go. Each character moves with conviction, shaped by their own moral compass, and somewhere along the highway through them you realise that life is rarely black or white — it's grey & the shade of grey you're willing to stand in. Billy, with his earnest heart & quiet wisdom, completely stole my heart ❤️ I wish there had been a little more of Sally, but perhaps that longing is part of the beauty. All in all, it is a beautiful, tender, thoughtful story — one I will cherish for a long time ✨️
A**R
What a journey!
What an absolute delight this book was. I struggled between not wanting to put it down and worrying that it would get over too soon. The characters are beautifully designed and so well connected to their backgrounds. You can understand who they are and why they are that way. You empathise with each even when you find them on morally shaky ground. I found myself cheering for each of them and wishing them success. The end was a bit low for me. Perhaps I wanted a happily ever after for each of them. Perhaps they each got what they deserved. But it did leave me a bit sad.
A**W
New and Fresh
Rating for book quality and not the book itself. The copy is genuine and great quality! Almost 80% into the book and I quite like it. However, it is quite different from what the readers of The Gentleman of Moscow may be expecting. The writing is still quite great!
A**N
Disappointed
The book had a very promising start. One became invested in the characters and the storyline that was developing. Then somewhere half way through the book, it completely lost the plot. Once the entourage reaches NYC, it became a drag with unnecessary details on the peripheral characters with the addition of a few more. Some of the situations that developed also just seemed to add weight not value to the story. I skimmed through to get through to the end which made one wonder - what was point of it all? Sorely disappointed!
P**I
An absolute masterpiece
Amor Towles has a style of writing that is very unique. There are characters, there are events and then there are musings that are filled with so much wisdom. I kept putting down this "unputdownable" book again and again, so as to let the joy linger for longer.
P**S
This book deserves a sequel!
Am eminently readable book, The Lincoln Highway, takes you to post WW II USA and the life of the young across social hierarchies in an country that is still figuring things out, much as the main characters are. If A Gentleman in Moscow is set in the political mileu of post WW I Russia, this one is set in the social landscape of 1950s America. As is true for any time period, the young try to make sense of the world around them, find their way through the labrynth and figure things out. Emmet returns home from a correctional facility when his father dies, primarily to take charge of his little brother Billy. His plans are laid out clearly in his head. He has a car, a little capital, some skill and the ability to work hard to make his plans work out. But his friends have other plans for him. Duchess and Woolly arrive and each tries to help Emmet and Billy in his own way, the result of which is that they go further from the Lincoln Highway and their destination, than towards it. The stories of all the young people in the book - Emmet, Duchess and Woolly, but also Townhouse and Sally, weave an intricate pattern - each adding to the other and making sense of the other. Emmet comes from a broken household but a Father who was loving and responsible, even if he was unintelligent in his business and went bankrupt. Woolly comes from a long line of illustrious ancestors, has never experienced want or hardship, but is burdened with a mind that looks for simplicity and patterns in everything. And finally Duchess, who has never seen a stable home or hearth, has a scoundrel for a father and yet has an acute sense of fairness. There is Sally, the only female character with a substantial presence in the book, who is yearning for a life where she can take care of herself and herself only, and is looking for an escape. If the innocence of 18 year olds was not endearing enough, there is Billy, all of 8, who looks at the world through his eyes full of wonder and delight. Each chapter, told from the vantage point of different characters, gives a different perspective to the same incident. We all see the same world, but look at it differently. On the flip side, some of the characters brought in don't add much to the story. Ulysses, Pastor John, Prof Abernathe - all have their cameos, but only take away from the plot. In a story that already has many threads to weave, this could have been avoided, without taking away anything from the story or the characters. This book deserves a sequel. Do Emmet and Billy reach California? Do they find their Mother? Do Emmet's plans of getting rich come true? How is Billy as a teenager? Does Sally get the life she yearns for - one where she takes care of just herself? And what of Ducchess?
S**N
Absotively captivating read!
I read this book with an open mind. It generously brought to mind William Golding’s Lord Of The Flies. I thoroughly enjoyed how Mr. Towles built his characters. At times, I was frustrated with how some of these characters behaved, but then, that’s how it plays out in real life too. (At times, there is a disconnect between my established persona and the things I do including my speech.) There were parts in the book where I felt Mr. Towles had hastily squeezed in twists and turns to make the situation more complete, but again, these are quite the nuances of storytelling, aren’t they! Detours apart, the story kept me glued to the book till I finished it. This book is truly a classic. I’m sure it will carve a niche for itself in the world of great books. I had intuitively felt this and nominated the book for the Goodreads awards. I was not at all surprised when <i>The Lincoln Highway</i> made it to the finals.
R**O
Entertained as much by the language as by the characters and story.
Superbly written with a sprinkling of metaphors that make you smile with their originality and the immediacy of their imagery. A delight to read.
A**H
Excellent
Thoroughly enjoyble. Packed with interesting and amusing characrers backed up by a great plot. Looking forward to Amor Towles' next offering.
G**L
A wonderful read
Such an “escapade” is the Lincoln Highway! Beautifully drawn characters are the young men and boy whose tales are intertwined. With the intention of travelling the highway to San Francisco as envisioned by young Billy, in search of the mother of him and Emmet, the pair are sidetracked through the actions of the other young men and find themselves heading for New York. The journey with them is full of action and snippets of homespun wisdom. Do take the journey with them.
L**I
Un bellissimo racconto on the road
Scritto benissimo e ritengo possa rientrare nei "classici" che resistono nel tempo
R**Y
Beautiful Writing, Wonderful Story!
The time was June of 1954, the place was a bankrupt farm in rural Nebraska, and the two central characters in this work of fiction were the Watson brothers, Emmett who was eighteen and his little brother Billy, who was eight. Emmett had been serving a sentence at a boy's reformatory for his part in the unintentional death of a local bully, but when his father died of cancer, a decision was made to release Emmett so that he could return home to care for his little brother. Billy had been staying with neighbors awaiting his brother's return, while the bank had been preparing foreclosure documents on the family property. The neighbors were Sally, a nineteen-year-old friend of the Watson's, and her father. Sally was plainspoken to a fault and somewhat resentful of her lot in life - which seemed to be taking care of her father until some other man for her to take care of would come along, but she cared for Billy with the fierceness of a mother hen watching over her only chick. As the story opened, Emmett, who had been serving his sentence on a work farm in Salina, Kansas, was being driven home to Nebraska by the warden of the reformatory. Emmett had plans to pick up his brother, spend a final day or two in the farmhouse, and then head out to Texas with Billy where he would make his fortune buying, remodeling, and selling houses, all financed by the secret nest-egg of three thousand dollars that their father had managed to hide from his creditors at the bank. But Billy had a different plan. He had found a cache of postcards written by their mother just after she abandoned the family several years before - postcards that their father kept secret from the boys. The postmarks and notes on the cards indicated that after their mother left the family she had traveled along the Lincoln Highway, the nation's first transnational paved thoroughfare, headed for California. (The Lincoln Highway ran from Times Square in New York City to Lincoln Park in San Francisco. The Watson's farm was close to the halfway point on the highway.) Emmett had no interest in reconnecting with their mother, but Billy, who was little more than in infant when she left, did. He eventually managed to convince Emmett that California was growing faster than Texas and would be a better prospect for his home renovation plans. All of their plans, however, were thrown into a cocked hat when Duchess and Woolly, two other young men who were serving time at the facility in Salina with Emmett, turned up at the Watson's farm after having stowed away in the trunk of the warden's car just as the warden and Emmett were preparing to leave Salina and head for Nebraska. Duchess was the son of an itinerate vaudeville actor and spent a lot of time growing up on the road and in and around New York City. Woolly was the son of a socially prominent New York family. Duchess, a charming plotter and manipulator, wanted Emmett - who had his own car - to drive them to New York where Woolly would access a pile of cash ($150,000) which his grandfather had set aside for him in the family safe as a "trust fund." If Emmett would drive them, they would split the trust three ways and Emmett would be set for set up to be a major homebuilder in California. Emmett, who regarded himself as far more sensible than the other two former reformatory inmates, declined, but he eventually agreed to go out of his way and take them to the train station in Omaha where the escapees could board a train for New York City. However, while they were enroute to Omaha, Emmett managed to get distracted by another of Duchess's misadventures long enough for Duchess to "borrow" his car - and Duchess and Woolly headed off to New York leaving the Watson brothers stranded in rural Nebraska. Emmett called Sally who came and transported them to the train station in Omaha where Emmett intended to board a train and head to New York City to get his car back, But after Sally left them at the train station, Emmett realized that his money, the nest-egg of $3,000, was still in the trunk of his car under the spare tire. After some careful research, he found an express freight train that was headed to New York City, and he and Billy secreted themselves in a boxcar. And from there Emmett and Billy Watson began a journey which was marked by personal adventures and encounters with characters very reminiscent those experienced by Huck and Jim as they floated down the Mississippi on their raft in a bygone era. The Lincoln Highway is a character-driven tale that is and pulled along through narratives of each major individual in the story. The manner in which it is presented, through the varying viewpoints, enables readers to gain a fuller perspective of what is actually happening, and it adds to the compelling nature of story. The pages, nearly six hundred of them, turn quickly. While The Lincoln Highway, is a very satisfying reading experience, the plotting is far from predictable and it keeps the reader's attention with unexpected twists and turns, much like any drive along an unfamiliar road. It's a book that is hard to put down, and a story that is difficult to quit. While The Lincoln Highway almost begs a sequel, I hope that does not happen because a furtherance of this tale would only serve to dilute its magnificent impact. This is a wonderful story, Mr. Towles. Your countless accolades are well deserved!
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