Amor Towles: The Lincoln Highway, 9780593489338, C format paperback, International Edition, Penguin USA
Eighteen yr.
old Emmett Watson is driven home by a warden to Morgen/Nebraska after having
served his time in a juvenile work camp. With the foreclosure of their family farm and
their father’s death, he and his 8 year old brother Billy plan to drive the
Lincoln Highway to San Francisco where they hope to find their mother who abandoned
them several years ago... Little does
Emmett know that two of his work camp friends, Duchess and Woolly, had hitched
a ride as stowaways in the warden’s car, forcing Emmett to change his plans entirely
rerouting their trip into the opposite direction, heading for New York where Woolly’s wealthy family lives.
And so begins a very multi-layered story, with several stories within a
story similar to Marquez plots. In
alternating chapters Emmett, Duchess, Woolly and Billy tell their version of
their 10 day adventure, with a cast of colorful characters like the preacher or
Ulysses making guest appearances. Billy, Emmett’s little brother, who has slightly
autistic characteristic was my favorite, followed by gutsy no-nonsense Sally, one of Emmett’s
friends from his hometown. Towles is a master in how he unfolds the formative
past of the three unforgettable main characters, Emmett, Duchess and Woolly with
each passing day of the trip and how he ties it all up in the end.
At times it felt like I was reading a YA novel
which irritated me in the beginning but once I settled into this coming-of-age,
road trip adventure story, I was won over. “The
Lincoln Highway” will not go down as my favorite Towles novel, but I am positive many will completely fall in love with this captivating, multifaceted tale.