Fast Lane on a Dirt Road

Fast Lane on a Dirt Road
ISBN-10
1890132748
ISBN-13
9781890132743
Category
History / United States / State & Local / General
Pages
247
Language
English
Published
2000
Publisher
Chelsea Green Publishing Company
Author
Joe Sherman

Description

Nestled between Montreal, Boston, and New York City exists a magic land called "Vermont." It's a state of the union, a state of mind, a state of grace, and a state of confusion and contradiction. Because of its beauty, its scale, and its depth of culture, Vermont is truly a perfect state.



The image of Vermont that leaps off the pages of Vermont Life is one of rolling hills, small villages, white churches with soaring steeples, town meetings, and blazing foliage. But there is another side of "A Perfect State," a complex composite of dirt roads turned to Mud Season quagmires, sharply divided citizens who cannot find common ground on critical issues such as school financing, gay marriage, environmental protection, and development.



Joe Sherman portrays the last fifty years of Vermont history, a time when the state evolved from a bucolic bedrock of conservatism to a rural theme park on America's cutting edge. Whether the subject is sprawl, gourmet ice cream (Vermont is home to Ben & Jerry's), or rock and roll (Vermont is also home to the rock band Phish), Vermont finds itself at the center of the stage. Fast Lane on a Dirt Road is a raucous book about a rocky state from a perspective so fresh that controversy is unavoidable. Traditionalists will take issue with Sherman's portrayal of the state as a cauldron of social change, while newcomers might object to the homage paid to Vermont's past.



Vermont was the last state to allow in a Wal-Mart, and the first to authorize domestic partnerships. It is the only state with a Socialist representative in Congress, a state where a Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate (dairy farmer Fred Tuttle) actually voted for his better-qualified opponent.



Sherman is a journalist and a social historian more than an academic. He has not had the luxury of time to filter and clarify his observations. As he states in his own acknowledgments, "Writing contemporary history is risky business." Fast Lane on a Dirt Road is a great read for anyone interested in the rapid evolution of American culture. The quirky history of Vermont shows us both where we've been and where we're going. The rest of America can learn a lot from Vermont.

Other editions

Similar books

  • And I Shall Have Some Peace There: Trading in the Fast Lane for My Own Dirt Road
    By Margaret Roach

    EACH PERSON IN THIS LAST GROUP knows his or her contribution: Matt Armendariz, Dora Cardinale, Amy Conway, Rich Fontaine, Mark Gerow, Maxwell and Sara Kate Gillingham-Ryan, Kelly Hagan, Adrian Higgins, Jane Kasten, Pam Kueber, ...

  • Life Along a Dirt Road
    By Harold D. Fanning

    Whether you're taking an unsuspecting friend on a snipe hunt gone wrong, or tossing coins behind the general store with Uncle Nickel, these stories may be just the prescription needed for what ails you... and you just might find them to be ...

  • Get Beach Slapped
    By Lisa Morgan

    Justask Pam Anderson; she kept getting the boobsand forgetting the brains until she finallygot wise getting rid of Tommy Lee, ordid she? Then again, she did marry Kid Rock. Well, for a few weeks anyway. Men just seem to flock like stray ...

  • Country Stores of Vermont: A History and Guide
    By Dennis Bathory-Kitsz

    When Baxter's Store burned in September 1931, townspeople were unmoved; Merton Baxter was not a wellloved figure in Marlboro. The story is told that a little girl on her way home with a bag of sugar spilled it onto the muddy road.

  • Companies We Keep: Employee Ownership and the Business of Community and Place
    By John Abrams

    A Return to Democracy. micklethwait, John, and adrian Wooldridge. The Company—A Short History of a Revolutionary Idea. ray, paul, and sherry ray anderson. The Cultural Creatives: How 50 Million People Are Changing the World.

  • Life in the Fast Lane
    By Jim Burton

    Life in the Fast Lane By: Jim Burton Author Jim Burton has lived his life in the fast lane. This book is a few entertaining and humorous short stories from his life. He was recruited by the mafia and worked with them for years.

  • Real Democracy: The New England Town Meeting and How It Works
    By Frank M. Bryan

    The simplest utility of Pearson's r, as it is called, is its ability to roughly summarize both the strength and the direction of a relation between two variables. The correlation coefficient ranges between —1 and +1.

  • Statesmen and Mischief Makers: Volume Iii: Officeholders and Their Contributions to History from Kennedy to Reagan
    By Scott Crass

    Historic Tidbit: Was notorious serial killer Ted Bundy, with Washington Governor Dan Evans as his passenger, the first person to cross the North Cascades Highway? It was 1972 and the Highway was to be opened for the first time.

  • Vermont Curiosities: Quirky Characters, Roadside Oddities & Other Offbeat Stuff
    By Robert Wilson

    During the Battle of Valcour Bay on Lake Champlain in 1776, General Benedict Arnold led a naval force against the British, the colonists with half the ships and firepower. Although Arnold lost what is considered the first battle fought ...

  • Encyclopedia of Social Networks
    By George A. Barnett

    It is not unusual for personal network elicitation to be restricted to certain types of alters, such as those providing social support or with whom the respondent shares certain behaviors. Most personal network studies do not limit the ...