The Last Great Road Bum: Difference between revisions

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Throughout the book, Sanderson travels throughout the [[Middle East]], [[Africa]], [[Asia]], and [[Central America]], in the pursuit of writing an novel about his experiences, which he describes as akin to an [[Great American Novel]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=N |last2=P |last3=R |date=2020-08-24 |title=”The Last Great Road Bum”: The Life Of Adventurer Joe Sanderson Explored |url=https://www.npr.org/2020/08/24/905536219/the-last-great-road-bum-the-life-of-adventurer-joe-sanderson-explored |access-date=2025-11-25 |work=NPR |language=en}}</ref>

Throughout the book, Sanderson travels throughout the [[Middle East]], [[Africa]], [[Asia]], and [[Central America]], in the pursuit of writing an novel about his experiences, which he describes as akin to an [[Great American Novel]].<ref>{{Cite news |last=N |last2=P |last3=R |date=2020-08-24 |title=”The Last Great Road Bum”: The Life Of Adventurer Joe Sanderson Explored |url=https://www.npr.org/2020/08/24/905536219/the-last-great-road-bum-the-life-of-adventurer-joe-sanderson-explored |access-date=2025-11-25 |work=NPR |language=en}}</ref>

== See also ==

* [[Joe Sanderson]]

* [[Héctor Tobar]]

== References ==

== References ==


Revision as of 20:47, 25 November 2025

2020 novel by Héctor Tobar

The Last Great Road Bum is a novel by Héctor Tobar. The book is an fictionalized account of Joe Sanderson‘s life.

The book is set in the 1960s through the 1980s, focusing on Sanderson’s travels. The book ends with Sanderson’s death in 1982 as a guerrilla fighter in the Salvadoran Civil War.[1]

Héctor Tobar, serving at the time as the Mexico City bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times first came across Sanderson’s papers in an encounter with a researcher from San Salvador, who told Tobar about his diary, which had been preserved by archivists. Tobar would later contact Sanderson’s brother, Steve, who would give Tobar access to the family’s collection of mail from Sanderson. At first, Tobar tried to write it as non-fiction, but later wrote it as an novel.[2]

Throughout the book, Sanderson travels throughout the Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Central America, in the pursuit of writing an novel about his experiences, which he describes as akin to an Great American Novel.[3]

References

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