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Hoboing was a colorful way of life that is gone forever and there are only a diminishing few survivors who can explode the myths and tell us what it was really like. McLean is one such survivor. His experiences varied from audacious, hilarious, heart-stopping, thoughtful, spiritual, and almost mystical. Now at age eighty the ex-hobo still dreams of riding freights and has vivid memory flashbacks. He has decided to share these memories with his "very numerous, very dear progeny". Non-relatives are welcome to kibitz.

Produktbeschreibung
Hoboing was a colorful way of life that is gone forever and there are only a diminishing few survivors who can explode the myths and tell us what it was really like. McLean is one such survivor. His experiences varied from audacious, hilarious, heart-stopping, thoughtful, spiritual, and almost mystical. Now at age eighty the ex-hobo still dreams of riding freights and has vivid memory flashbacks. He has decided to share these memories with his "very numerous, very dear progeny". Non-relatives are welcome to kibitz.
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Autorenporträt
Bored and craving adventure, Gordon McLean quit school after grade VIII to become a warm weather hobo and itinerant farm worker. After seven seasons he married, worked at Ocean Falls, and then joined the Air Force. After the war, subsidized by the Department of Veterans' Affairs, he was able to complete five years of university and become a high school teacher. He taught for thirty-two years including two years in Montreal teaching English to francophone students. For adventure during his working years McLean cruised the B.C. coast with his wife and three kids in a fifteen-foot open boat loaded with a tent and camping gear. He also climbed with the Alpine Club of Canada and the Seattle Mountaineers. Now, an octogenarian, he must be content with mountain hiking rather than climbing. His "adventures" no longer have the spice of danger. But he has enjoyed reliving his hobo days which included plenty of danger. McLean has three children, seventeen grandchildren, and twenty-six "Greats." He and his second wife live in Nanaimo and spend their winters in Southern Arizona.