The Forgotten Road (Thorndike Press Large Print Basic: Broken Road - Book #2)

by Richard Paul Evans

Hardcover, 2018

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Collection

Publication

Thorndike Press Large Print (2018), Edition: Large Print, 295 pages

Description

Fiction. Literature. Romance. HTML:The second novel in the New York Times bestselling trilogy from Richard Paul Evans about a man on an inspirational pilgrimage across Route 66 to find his way back to himself. Chicago celebrity and successful pitchman Charles James is supposed to be dead. Everyone believes he was killed in a fiery plane crash. But thanks to a remarkable twist of fate, he's very much alive and ready for a second chance at life�??and love. Narrowly escaping death has brought Charles some clarity: the money, the fame, the fast cars�??none of it was making him happy. The last time he was happy�??truly happy�??was when he was married to his ex-wife Monica, before their connection was destroyed by his ambition and greed. Charles decides to embark on an epic quest: He will walk the entire length of Route 66, from Chicago to California, where he hopes to convince Monica to give him another shot. Along the way, Charles is immersed in the deep and rich history of one of America's most iconic highways. But the greater journey he finds is the one he takes in his heart as he meets people along the road who will change his perspective on the world. But will his transformation be enough to earn… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member mchwest
This was the second book of this story and it was very good. I love the day in and day out details of walking Route 66 and how this man is trying to literally be ready to revive himself from the dead. I'm hoping there is another installment to this story, can't wait to read it.
LibraryThing member JenniferRobb
By chance, this was the next title on the library shelf when I went to find another audiobook to listen to in my car--I had just about finished the first book of the trilogy at that point.

This book continues the journey Charles James (Gonzalez) began in "The Broken Road". Warning: Spoilers May Lie
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Ahead. Read at your own discretion

***

In this book, we find out how it was that he was thought to be on the flight that crashed but really wasn't. Charles faces a choice. Stay "dead" and reinvent himself or reveal to the world that he's alive.
At first, he seems to plan that he'll walk Rte. 66 but then he changes his mind and thinks he'll do this big reveal in front of the large group that assembles for the memorial service his assistant Amanda throws at a posh venue. Actually, he is hoping his ex-wife will come to the memorial service and he can reunite with her. Not only does she not come (we find out why later in the book) but very few people attend it. (In fact, I think he is dismayed that so few people from his "office" attend. And one would think that many would since he was the boss--just to get the "brownie" points of doing so--but maybe they all decided to scramble to find other jobs--who knows.) So . . . no big reveal--and he decides to take the walking trip after all.

He has the presence of mind to transfer all his funds to a Cayman Islands account that few know about--but not the smarts to copy the account info. down in case his phone gets damaged or lost or falls in water etc. (Note to self: Make sure account access info is in multiple places if you're planning to put yourself in situations where things might go south.)

This book covers approximately the first half of Charles's Rte. 66 walk (from Chicago, IL to Amarillo, TX). At first, it seems to go well. I enjoyed reading about places along the route where Charles stops to eat, rest, visit a museum or attraction etc. (But I have to admit, that his money stash got him farther along than I thought it would. I realize he is using his credit card early on, especially for lodging, but he gets to Oklahoma/Texas and still apparently has a large amount of cash in his bag when he's robbed by the "motorcycle gang" despite visiting many attractions, eating at restaurants, etc. and certainly he can't have used his credit card in all these places for all the weeks it takes him to get to Texas. Did no one report him dead to the credit card company? Scary if not.

After he's robbed of almost everything of value, Charles meets a kind-hearted waitress who not only gives him the money the robbers left her as a tip, but also buys him his breakfast. I was a bit surprised that he didn't ask if there was a job for him there (dishwashing etc.) to earn some money to continue on--but given his recent past he may not have thought of it. It seems he thought he could just go to a bank and transfer money--forgetting, of course, that he has no account information without access to his phone.

The waitress and a migrant worker he meets named Eddie, begin Charles's route to being grateful for "normal" things like a soft bed with pillows, adequate food to eat etc. Charles meets Eddie in a group assembled outside a convenience store while they are waiting for a ride to the farm. Eddie greets Charles and gives him the scoop on migrant farm work in that area. Eddie takes Charles under his wing and helps look out for him. When Charles doesn't understand that he needs to buy food for his sustenance rather than just snacks, Eddie shares food with him. Eddie introduces Charles around to the other migrant workers, etc.

I was a bit surprised that Charles didn't take "LeGree"'s offer to stay in a slightly nicer place but glad that Charles wouldn't take special treatment that his friend Eddie wasn't going to get as well. The life of a migrant worker was an eye-opener to me. I knew there were migrant workers, but I didn't realize how some farms treated them or charged them for transportation etc. or how they were in substandard housing. Most won't complain because if they do, they risk being deported. It's sad.

I was glad to see Charles take Eddie out to a restaurant that Eddie had pointed out to him on their way to the farm and glad that Charles paid for Eddie to have a nice meal to thank him for his kindness to Charles in teaching him the ropes. I hope that we see the conclusion to Eddie's story in the last book of the trilogy--I hope that Eddie gets a chance to be with his wife who is working as a nanny in Florida and whom he usually only gets to see once a year.

At this point, Charles decides to call Amanda and reveal to her that he is still alive--mostly because he needs her help. They must have some special relationship because he asks her to wire him money and she does (from her own stash). He's also still treating her more like an assistant--though I think he is more grateful to and for her now than he probably was in the past.

The book ends as Charles sets out on the second half of the Rte. 66 journey.
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Original language

English

Original publication date

2018-05-01

Physical description

295 p.; 8.5 inches

ISBN

1501111795 / 9781501111792
Page: 0.2628 seconds