

Born in 1928, Browning grew up in
a middle-class Ohio family but found college unappealing and found little to love in the
U.S. Navy.
A newspaper advertisement caught his attention: Cars delivered, drivers wanted. He showed
up at the Detroit address, and immediately
began working for the owner of the driveaway business, identified only as the Old Man.
Browning normally found himself driving in a convoy,
allowing him to become acquainted with other restless men. Their route from Detroit to Los
Angeles before the completion of the interstate
highway system took them mostly through small-town America. Some of the men signed up for
round trips; others asked for one-way
journeys only. The drivers usually punctuated their overnight stays in cheap motels with
eating, drinking, shooting pool and seeking sex,
finding willing women from time to time. The narrative and the dialogue are often raunchy;
Browning certainly doesn.t sugarcoat the
raucousness or rootlessness of the life. On paper, it looked as if no one would ever take
a job like that, Browning says. In practice,
there were a dozen applicants for every position. For the wanderers and neer-do-wells the
job was made to order: the first deal they
had ever run across that actually paid them for indulging their natural bentflitting
back and forth across the country, just knocking around.
A well-written, matter-of-fact account about a vanished hand-to-mouth occupation.
Kirkus Discoveries