mtdrift
mtdrift
mtdrift

awww man! how did I miss this. Costco run in my Mini a few years ago. Not visible a case of 32 Coke cans, a bag of 4 liters of milk.

What you gonna do with all that junk? All that junk inside your trunk.

You should put Travis into the grays.

Tell Trump to leave the auto industry alone.  There’s your start.

My favorite writer. I’m not even that big on mystery stories, but the dialog and descriptions are just killer. I’ve read several suggested authors who write in a similar style, but IMO, none match up.

Welcome!

Its really good, His brain was not as baked yet, seriously good insight into the campaign process

Myself I’ve been leafing through the pop culture hit “Book of Revelation.” 

Yes, I forgot about River Horse. Roads to Quoz was also good - but not as good as Blue Highways or River Horse.

The only automotive reading I have done lately is catching up on issues of Hagerty and Road & Track magazines.

Good book- His follow up River Horse was interesting too. 

Scientific Design of Exhaust and Intake Systems by Phillip Smith.

Ulysses S. Grants personal memoirs.  It’s fantastic.

I just started rereading Blue Highways, by William Least Heat-Moon (I read it the first time about 20 years ago, or more). It is more about traveling than automobiles, but I remember that it was an interesting read.

I have been watching the Prisoner with Patrick McGoohan

In the Kingdom of Ice. If you ever feel lonely, at least you’re not trapped in the Artic.

‘Far From the Madding Crowd’, Thomas Hardy. Not car-related, obviously, but it seems appropriate and it’s available for free from Project Gutenberg:

I’ve been “working from home” for the last 5 weeks.  During which I started re-reading Moby-Dick.  I thought it’s an appropriate sort of masochistic entertainment.

I just started rereading my Raymond Chandler collection—not about cars, but they’re mentioned a lot. For machine books, I’m more a WW2 fighter pilot diary fan, and my car books are reference/non-fiction, but I probably enjoyed Chaparral by Richard Falconer the most as far as those kinds of things go.