Don't Make Me Pull Over! by Richard Ratay - ISBN: 9781501188756
Paperback
Relive hilarious family road trips before screens, seatbelts, and sanity prevailed.

Don't Make Me Pull Over!

An Informal History of the Family Road Trip

$44.80

  • Paperback

    288 pages

  • Release Date

    1 June 2019

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Summary

“A lighthearted, entertaining trip down Memory Lane” (Kirkus Reviews), Don’t Make Me Pull Over! offers a nostalgic look at the golden age of family road trips—before portable DVD players, smartphones, and Google Maps.

The birth of America’s first interstate highways in the 1950s hit the gas pedal on the road trip phenomenon and families were soon streaming—sans seatbelts!—to a range of sometimes stirring, sometimes wacky locations. In the days before cheap air travel, familie…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781501188756
ISBN-10:1501188755
Author:Richard Ratay
Publisher:Simon & Schuster
Imprint:Scribner
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:288
Release Date:1 June 2019
Weight:229g
Dimensions:213mm x 140mm x 18mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“The season’s most playful (and best titled) entry … [Ratay] vividly captures that relatively brief – but iconic – time before cheap air travel and Wi-Fi, when ‘six people locked up together in a tiny padded room,’ hurtling down the highway without seatbelts, was something not simply to be enjoyed but survived. Under Ratay’s confident and relaxed spell, anyone of a certain age will be instantly transported back to those more innocent times when Fuzzbusters and eight-track players were the order of the day … Deceptively informative, this high-spirited romp down the byways of America is part social history, part memoir, and a loving salute to that brief time when the wood-paneled family station wagon was king of the open road.” —Andrew McCarthy, New York Times Book Review“Don’t Make Me Pull Over! is nostalgia-glazed…charming…[and] poignant.” —Maureen Corrigan, Fresh Air“With smartphones and rear-seat entertainment systems, the family road-trip experience has changed dramatically, writes Ratay in this enjoyable reminiscence on what they used to be … [His] informative, often hilarious family narrative perfectly captures the love-hate relationship many have with road trips.” —Publishers Weekly“Richard Ratay’s long-distance childhood adventures in his family’s giant land cruisers are at the center of Don’t Make Me Pull Over!, a breezy and warm-hearted ‘informal history’ of the great American family road trip…It all goes down like a cold lemonade on a hot summer’s day. Mr. Ratay is a charming raconteur who always seems to know just when it’s time to get us all back into the car with his big, quintessentially middle-class family.” —Wall Street Journal“As someone who missed the golden age of the family road trip, I found Don’t Make Me Pull Over! a wonderful revelation, filled with unexpected—and frequently amusing—insights into how so much of our culture was built.” —Rob Erwin, author of Lost with Directions: Ambling Around America“If only this book were available to Clark Griswold, he and his family might well have stayed home. Don’t Make Me Pull Over! is an encyclopedia of road trip adventures.” —Chevy Chase, star of National Lampoon’s Vacation and “Saturday Night Live”“A book with a title as good as Don’t Make Me Pull Over! has a lot to live up to, and somehow Richard Ratay manages to deliver. It’s a memoir, a work of popular history, and a love letter all in one. Books this wise are seldom so funny; books this funny are rarely so wise.” —Andrew Ferguson, author of Land of Lincoln and Crazy U“Captures all the adventure, bonding, desperate conflict, and existential self-interrogation that is only made possible by hours (and hours) on the road with your family. Read it, but probably don’t read it while also driving your family around.” —John Hodgman, author of More Information than You Require and Vacationland“Ratay’s impressively researched book isn’t just a road trip across America—it’s a trip back in time. Suddenly I was eight years old again and bouncing around seatbelt-free in the back of a Ford Country Squire station wagon.” —Ken Jennings, record-breaking “Jeopardy!” champion, and author of Maphead“Ratay has perfectly captured the essence of what it was like to embark on a road trip in the golden days of family vacations. Combining spot-on history and a great sense of humor Don’t Make Me Pull Over! feels so authentic I got carsick reading it.” —Jane Stern, co-author of Roadfood“I was laughing the whole way. As an expert on the 1970’s (I was there) I encourage you to climb in, wait for that sweet Toronado engine to purr, and let Rich Ratay take you on his wonderful ride through the great American pastime known as the family road trip.” —Tom Shillue, author of Mean Dads for a Better America“Entertaining social history spiced with funny family memories. The characters include the first man to drive a car around the world, in 1906 (before fast food!). And America’s first highway czar, who served under seven presidents until Eisenhower fired him. And then there’s Ratay himself, as a 10-year-old, on the CB radio: ‘Blue Thunder here, gobbling up the zipper dashes like PacMan rollin’ for a power pill.’ Great stuff.” —Paul Ingrassia, author of Engines of Change “Takes us back to the once popular family road trips of vacationing Americans in the 1970’s. Stuffed into a station wagon filled with luggage and provisions, backseat-bound Rich typically set off on adventures that possessed all the idiosyncratic melodrama of family life but played out in a confined space.” —Anthony Sammarco, author of Lost Boston and The History of Howard Johnson’s“Smooth prose that entertains and enlightens … For anyone who has ever been on a road trip, or is planning to take one, this book is a must read.” —Michael Wallis, Route 66: The Mother Road and The Lincoln Highway: Coast to Coast from Times Square to the Golden Gate

About The Author

Richard Ratay

Richard Ratay was the last of four kids raised by two mostly attentive parents in Elm Grove, Wisconsin. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a degree in journalism and has worked as an award-winning advertising copywriter for twenty-five years. Ratay lives in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin, with his wife, Terri, their two sons, and two very excitable rescue dogs.

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