A review by grayduck
River-Horse by William Least Heat-Moon

Reviewed 3/31/2005

Annotation:
William Least Heat-Moon, along with his co-pilot “Pilotis”, set sail from New York’s Harbor for a trip of over five thousand miles to Astoria, Oregon and the Pacific. This cross-country trek solely by boat gives the travelers a view of the United States that not many have seen – the Erie Canal of the great steel ships; the Mississippi of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn; the Missouri of Lewis and Clark; the Colombia of the gold rush. At times, River-Horse reads like a lazy stream on a summer day – filled with Heat-Moon’s ruminations and observations. There are dangers and narrow escapes, unique people along the way, and the rush to reach the Continental Divide before the Rockies’ snow melts. The gracefulness of Heat-Moon’s prose set against the beautiful backyard of the United States stirs up wanderlust within the reader. A highly recommended journey for armchair travelers and philosophers.

Actual Review:
Oh, I adore William Least Heat-Moon's books. Blue Highways is my favorite travel book, and one of my favorite books in general. Written almost 20 years later, River-Horse is also excellent, but it doesn't hold the same place in my heart.
"Only the curious, if they live, have a tale worth telling."
"Live little, change little."
"Live lots, change your lot with the dead."
"What is this, a competition of homilies?"