The Lost Continent

Unabridged
Author: Bill Bryson
Narrator: Kerry Shale
Genres: Drama, Travel
Publisher: BBC Radio
Date: February 2004
Length: 2 hours, 20 minutes
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Hardly anyone ever leaves Des Moines, Iowa. But Bill Bryson did, and after ten years in England he decided to go home to a foreign country. In an aging Chevrolet Chevette, he drove nearly 14,000 miles through thirty-eight states to compile this hilarious and perceptive state-of-the-nation report on small-town America. From the Deep South to the Wild West, from Elvis' birthplace through to Custer's Last Stand, Bryson visits places he re-named Dullard, Coma, and Doldrum (so the residents don't sue or come after him with baseball bats). But his hopes of finding the American dream end in a nightmare of greed, ignorance and pollution. The Lost Continent is a wickedly witty and savagely funny assessment of a country lost to itself and to him.

Reviews (10)

Does he Even like America?

Written by Anonymous on June 25th, 2009

  • Book Rating: 2/5

It seems like he doesn't like America. He looks for every opportunity to put something down or make fun. it gets old pretty quick. This is the worst Bill Bryson and I am a major fan of his.

Good writing, awful reading

Written by Jocelyn from Eagle River, AK on April 30th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I enjoy all of Bryson's books, this is not his best but still thoroughly enjoyable. However, if you're used to listening to Bryson's beautiful reading voice, with its gentle pace and lovely blended American/British accent...you're in for a horrible shock. This narrator is awful--he reads way too fast, and does a variety of awful grating not-funny voices. Unless Bryson does a version in audio format, just read the paper copy.

The Lost Continent

Written by Victorine Merriman on February 26th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Bill Bryson is my new favorite author. I was SO disappointed, therefore, by the narrator. He spoke WAY too fast, and didn't do justice to the prose. I loved the story and the humor,the snide remarks and poignant phrases, but was constantly distracted by the narrator's interpretation. He did do a good job of using accents and his voice is pleasing, but it was otherwise difficult to listen to him. Bring back Bill as narrator of his own stories!

Annoying

Written by Steve Y on July 24th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 1/5

The only thing more annoying than listening to Bill Bryson moan about any and every conceivable thing is someone else reading his work doing the same thing. This reader is particularly bad. He tries to be cute with his impersonations of the victims of Bryson's displeasure of the moment. Unfortunately, he is neither cute nor entertaining. If you've got to listen to Bryson -- and he does have a wierd sense of humor and some merit in many of his works -- listen to Bryson read Bryson. At least you get it straight from the horse's mouth -- or maybe from the other end is more accurate.

The Bottom of the Barrel

Written by Anonymous from Princeton, NJ on February 6th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I've enjoyed all of the other selections by Bill Bryson, so I was ready to enjoy this one - not so! This was so mean spiritied that I stopped listening after about 15 minutes. The ridiculous pace of the narration was also a contributing factor. It takes alot for me to give up on a book, and this is the only selection of over 100 where I didn't even get through the first CD.

Bill Bryson Fans......D O N O T Listen to this Book!!!!

Written by Tonytoga from Houston, TX on February 3rd, 2007

  • Book Rating: 1/5

If this had been Bryson's best work (and it certainly IS NOT), the audio production is SO BAD, it wouldn't be worth the listen anyway. Kerry Shale's double time, rapid fire narration is just silly. What producer would allow such? Were they attempting to get 180 minutes of audio on two 72-minute disks? As for Mr. Bryson, thank goodness this was his first book and he has matured greatly since its writing. I am a big fan of his work but this book, while giving the first glimpses of his incredibly clever style, also shows the smug, elitist, superior, Eurocentric attitude of an individual I wouldn't want to know. In Mr. Bryson's book, mid and southern America is populated only by gaptoothed hayseeds incapable of a complete thought and wholly unable to communicate in an understable language. I'm sure he remains an east coast blueblood snob these days but at least his writing has matured to a higher standard. If there were a half star rating, this book was worthy only of that.

Lost Continent

Written by Lee on November 23rd, 2006

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Whilst I haven't listened to this book, I agree with the earlier comments that this author goes off like a bullet from a gun (juding by the sound clip). He is not Bill Bryson, if you listen to the sound clip from 'Neither Here Nor There' - now that's Bill Bryson. Despite being American, spending a lot of his life in the UK has left its mark, especially in his accent. It seems to me that for some reason the publishers have used a more conventional American accent to narrate this book, I don't know why they do this, no one dubs the latest Hollywood blockbuster in an English tongue when product is shipped the other way. Being English myself, Bill doesn't have a difficult to understand accent. On the contrary, he sounds quintessentially English - how you would expect the Prime Minister or even 007 to sound. It's his book and he should narrate it. I've listened to two books of his. 'A walk in the woods' & 'Life & Times of the Thunderbolt kid' both were excellent - both narrated by Bill.

lost continent

Written by Anonymous on November 16th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 1/5

The reader reads far too fast to allow you to enjoy this; but not sure it can be enjoyed at any pace as the content is rather mundane.

Lost Continent

Written by Anonymous on October 11th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Bill Bryson's take on small town America is laugh-out-loud funny at times, often poignant, and written with deep affection. But the book ends abruptly and the narrator's pace is breathless. (To be fair, Bryson's writing does have a frenetic pace to it, but it's harder to catch some of the details when listening, rather than looking at the words on a page.) This is an ideal book for short road trips or for those who've read some of Bryson's longer (and better developed) books. There are only two discs, so add it to your bookshelf for the times when you don't want the hassle of a multi-part book, or if you'll be listening with someone who won't share multiple trips with you.

Too fast

Written by Anonymous on October 5th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 3/5

This is an interesting book but the narrator’s reading is so quick that a lot of the good jokes are lost.

Author Details

Author Details

Bryson, Bill

Bill Bryson was born in Des Moines, Iowa, the son of William and Mary Bryson. He has an older brother, Michael, and a sister, Mary Elizabeth.

Bryson was educated at Drake University but dropped out in 1972, deciding to backpack around Europe for four months. He returned to Europe the following year with his high-school friend, the pseudonymous Stephen Katz. Some of his experiences from this trip are relived as flashbacks in Neither Here Nor There: Travels in Europe, which documents a similar journey Bryson made twenty years later.

Bryson first visited the United Kingdom in 1973 during a tour of Europe, and decided to stay after landing a job working in a psychiatric hospital - the now defunct Holloway Sanatorium in Virginia Water, Surrey. It was there that he met a nurse named Cynthia, whom he eventually married. The couple returned to the USA in 1975 so Bryson could complete his college degree, after which, in 1977, they settled in England, where they remained until 1995. Living in North Yorkshire and mainly working as a journalist, Bryson eventually became chief sub editor of the business section of The Times, and then deputy national news editor of the business section of The Independent. He left journalism in 1987, three years after the birth of his third child. Still living in Yorkshire, Bryson started writing independently and in 1990 their fourth and final child, Sam, was born.

In 1995, Bryson returned to the United States to live in Hanover, New Hampshire for some years, the stories of which feature in his book I'm A Stranger Here Myself, alternatively titled Notes from a Big Country in the United Kingdom and Canada. In 2003, however, the Brysons and their four children returned to England, and now live near Wymondham, Norfolk.

Also in 2003, in conjunction with World Book Day, voters in the United Kingdom chose Bryson's book Notes from a Small Island as that which best sums up British identity and the state of the nation.[1] In the same year, he was appointed a Commissioner for English Heritage.

In 2004, Bryson won the prestigious Aventis Prize for best general science book with A Short History of Nearly Everything.[2] This 500-page popular literature piece explores not only the histories and current statuses of the sciences, but also reveals their humble and often humorous beginnings. Although one "top scientist" is alleged to have jokingly described the book as "annoyingly free of mistakes",[3] Bryson himself makes no such claim, and a list of seven reported errors in the book is available online, identifying the chapter in which each appears but with no page or line references. In 2005, the book won the EU Descartes Prize for science communication.[2]

Bryson has also written two popular works on the history of the English language — Mother Tongue and Made in America — and, more recently, an update of his guide to usage, Bryson's Dictionary of Troublesome Words (published in its first edition as The Penguin Dictionary of Troublesome Words in 1983). These books were popularly acclaimed and well-reviewed, though they received criticism from academics in the field, who claimed they contained factual errors, urban myths, and folk etymologies. Though Bryson has no formal linguistics qualifications, he is generally a well-regarded writer on the subject of languages.

In 2005, Bryson was appointed Chancellor of Durham University,[3] succeeding the late Sir Peter Ustinov, and has been particularly active with student activities, even appearing in a Durham student film: the sequel to The Assassinator and promoting litter picks in the city[4]. He had praised Durham as "a perfect little city" in Notes from a Small Island. He has also been awarded honorary degrees by numerous universities.

In 2006, Bryson ran (as part of a celebrity relay team) in the Tresco marathon, the Scillian equivalent of the London marathon. The same year, Frank Cownie, the mayor of Des Moines, awarded Bryson the key to the city and announced that October 21, 2006 would be known as, Bill Bryson - "The Thunderbolt Kid" day.[5]

In November 2006, Bryson interviewed Prime Minister Tony Blair on the state of science and education.[6]

On December 13, 2006, Bryson was awarded an honorary OBE for his contribution to literature.[7] The following year, he was awarded the James Joyce Award of the Literary and Historical Society of University College Dublin.

In January 2007, Bryson was the Schwartz Visiting Fellow of the Pomfret School in Connecticut.[8]

In May 2007, he became the President of the Campaign to Protect Rural England.[9][10] His first area focus in this role was the establishment of an anti-littering campaign across England. He discussed the future of the countryside with Richard Mabey, Sue Clifford, Nicholas Crane and Richard Girling at CPRE's Volunteer Conference in November 2007.