Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Another Roadside Attraction

Another Roadside Attraction
Author: Tom Robbins
ISBN-13: 9780613916691
ISBN-10: 0613916697
Publication Date: 4/1990
Rating:
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
 4

3.6 stars, based on 4 ratings
Publisher: Rebound by Sagebrush
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

14 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

mardou avatar reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 16 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I had thoroughly enjoyed the rest of Tom Robbins' novels over the years, so I was excited to finally be able to read this, his first. Honestly, this book didn't impress me from the get-go, and I was kind of disappointed with it; in my mind it took a while to pick up. But, oh, when it did, it lassoed me in just like all his other books had in the past. So give it a chance!
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 19 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
One of my least favorite Tom Robbins books, but still a worthwhile read. If you haven't read Robbbins yet, don't let this be your first.
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 39 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Robbins style is unique. He's fanciful and very funny but he is also brilliant.
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 9 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Very Tom Robbins: crazy characters, events, and plot turns.
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 12 more book reviews
Funny, lyrical, engaging, this book has all the good stuff. I zipped through it, and I want to read it again.
MyLikeIt avatar reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 450 more book reviews
My favorite novel by this hilarious wordsmith. And I'm not just saying so because my stepdaughter is named for the heroine of this wacky tale. So, so, so funny. Buckle up and enjoy the ride through this novelist's inventive, yet familiar, psyche. Recommended!
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 495 more book reviews
A classic!
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 34 more book reviews
fantastic
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 49 more book reviews
quirky in the Ken Kesey vein. fairly good writing, but not enough story for me.
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 37 more book reviews
Enjoyable read.
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on
This is the book that swept me into the world of Tom Robbins. It is fun, imaginative, daring, and Tom is at his best when he "writes what wants to be written" - using his completely unique style of metaphorical writing. Fantastic!!!
ladystyx avatar reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 440 more book reviews
by the same author as Even Cowgirls Get the Blues.
Readnmachine avatar reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 1474 more book reviews
Robbins' riff on organized religion is still as sharp and funny as it was when it was written half a century ago.

Even though it was his first novel, 'Another Roadside Attraction' already shows the structural elements Robbins continued to use in his other works: a collection of oddball characters and seemingly unrelated and wildly unlikely events, all stitched together with wry observations and astonishing metaphors. The reader is entertained, amused, and frequently baffled as to just where this journey is going but it eventually gets there and it always turns out that the trip was worth the effort.

In this debut effort, John Paul Zimmer (loincloth-clad musician, sculptor, and mystic) in company with his companion baboon, Mon Cul and his lubricious bride Amanda (the ultimate hippy-chick Earth mother) decide to rehabilitate an abandoned diner in Washington's rain-soaked Skagit Valley. There they open a hot dog stand and zoo containing, among other things, a tsetse fly preserved in amber, a flea circus whose performers are costumed by Amanda in microscopic velvet and spangles, a collection of garter snakes, and a bow-legged rooster. From there, it's but a hop, skip, and jump (which, in Robbins-land means about 200 pages) to an astonishing discovery in the catacombs of the Vatican and the need to reveal something which could bring down Western civilization. Actually, there are two decisions: should they tell, and is Western civilization worth keeping, anyway.

If one digs down below the mushroom-glazed surface, there's a great deal to think about in this novel. Robbins is not reluctant to tackle The Big Questions. Only the reader can decide who comes out on top in the resulting brawl.
reviewed Another Roadside Attraction on + 293 more book reviews
Clairvoyants, trained fleas, the Second Coming - what more could you ask for?? Tom Robbins is a wonderful writer and this is one os his classics. Of course, in my opinion, they ALL are.