Está viendo la página Spain versión del sitio.
Le gustaría cambiar a su sitio local?
Última edición

American Road Magazine Summer 2016 Edición anterior

English
3 Reseñas   •  English   •   Leisure Interest (Travel)
Only €3,49
Since ancient times, myths have helped us make sense of our world—where we’re going, where we’ve been. The classic Greek stories—the Iliad, the Odyssey, the Argonautica, and the Oresteia, among them—have endured through the centuries because they speak to archetypal truths.

Myths teach. Myths interpret. And in this issue of American Road, they turn the highway into a labyrinth, and the roadside into a land touched by the golden fingers of Midas.
Our odyssey begins with a trip through time: In 225 BCE, the Greek engineer Philo of Byzantium identified seven wonders of the ancient world he recommended every good citizen see. We take his list and apply it to the USA, finding our own “Colossus of Roads” and other marvels in “Seven Wonders of the Modern Road.” Did you know that the modern-day Zeus sits at the corner of Woodward and Jefferson avenues in downtown Detroit? No? Well, he does. And he’s green.

“Mythic coroportions,” this issue’s compendium, is the largest we’ve ever assembled. In it, we visit thirty-six sites named for Greek gods, heroes, and monsters—from California’s Hercules Tree to South Carolina’s Mt. Atlanticus Minotaur Goff and Baltimore’s Orpheus with the Awkward Foot. You’ll even find a cyclops in there—a one-eyed giant that serves as a fine introduction to our final feature, “O Brother, Where Art Thou? Revisited.” Fifteen years ago, the Coen brothers brought the songs of the sirens, the winds of Aeolus, and John Goodman’s gluttonous Bible-thumping Polyphemus to Mississippi and the moviegoing masses. We look back at the production and its filming locations in the Magnolia State that managed to capture the magic of ancient Greece and the lands Odysseus visited during his mythic journey.

Life is a poem and a journey—a sonnet and an odyssey. Write it, mythically, on the road.
read more read less
American Road Preview Pages American Road Preview Pages American Road Preview Pages American Road Preview Pages American Road Preview Pages American Road Preview Pages American Road Preview Pages American Road Preview Pages

American Road

Summer 2016 Since ancient times, myths have helped us make sense of our world—where we’re going, where we’ve been. The classic Greek stories—the Iliad, the Odyssey, the Argonautica, and the Oresteia, among them—have endured through the centuries because they speak to archetypal truths. Myths teach. Myths interpret. And in this issue of American Road, they turn the highway into a labyrinth, and the roadside into a land touched by the golden fingers of Midas. Our odyssey begins with a trip through time: In 225 BCE, the Greek engineer Philo of Byzantium identified seven wonders of the ancient world he recommended every good citizen see. We take his list and apply it to the USA, finding our own “Colossus of Roads” and other marvels in “Seven Wonders of the Modern Road.” Did you know that the modern-day Zeus sits at the corner of Woodward and Jefferson avenues in downtown Detroit? No? Well, he does. And he’s green. “Mythic coroportions,” this issue’s compendium, is the largest we’ve ever assembled. In it, we visit thirty-six sites named for Greek gods, heroes, and monsters—from California’s Hercules Tree to South Carolina’s Mt. Atlanticus Minotaur Goff and Baltimore’s Orpheus with the Awkward Foot. You’ll even find a cyclops in there—a one-eyed giant that serves as a fine introduction to our final feature, “O Brother, Where Art Thou? Revisited.” Fifteen years ago, the Coen brothers brought the songs of the sirens, the winds of Aeolus, and John Goodman’s gluttonous Bible-thumping Polyphemus to Mississippi and the moviegoing masses. We look back at the production and its filming locations in the Magnolia State that managed to capture the magic of ancient Greece and the lands Odysseus visited during his mythic journey. Life is a poem and a journey—a sonnet and an odyssey. Write it, mythically, on the road.


SELECCIONAR FORMATO:
Acceso instantáneo

Ofertas digitales disponibles:

Ejemplar digital único Summer 2016
 
3,49 / issue
Este número y otros números atrasados no se incluyen en un American Road suscripción. Las suscripciones incluyen el último número de la revista y los nuevos números publicados durante el periodo de suscripción. €3,25 por número . Si desea suscribirse, consulte nuestro Opciones de suscripción
Los ahorros se calculan sobre la compra comparable de números sueltos durante un periodo de suscripción anualizado y pueden variar respecto a los importes anunciados. Los cálculos son meramente ilustrativos. Las suscripciones digitales incluyen el último número y todos los números regulares publicados durante su suscripción, a menos que se indique lo contrario. El periodo elegido se renovará automáticamente a menos que se cancele en el área Mi cuenta hasta 24 horas antes del final de la suscripción actual.

Issue Cover

American Road  |  Summer 2016  


Since ancient times, myths have helped us make sense of our world—where we’re going, where we’ve been. The classic Greek stories—the Iliad, the Odyssey, the Argonautica, and the Oresteia, among them—have endured through the centuries because they speak to archetypal truths.

Myths teach. Myths interpret. And in this issue of American Road, they turn the highway into a labyrinth, and the roadside into a land touched by the golden fingers of Midas.
Our odyssey begins with a trip through time: In 225 BCE, the Greek engineer Philo of Byzantium identified seven wonders of the ancient world he recommended every good citizen see. We take his list and apply it to the USA, finding our own “Colossus of Roads” and other marvels in “Seven Wonders of the Modern Road.” Did you know that the modern-day Zeus sits at the corner of Woodward and Jefferson avenues in downtown Detroit? No? Well, he does. And he’s green.

“Mythic coroportions,” this issue’s compendium, is the largest we’ve ever assembled. In it, we visit thirty-six sites named for Greek gods, heroes, and monsters—from California’s Hercules Tree to South Carolina’s Mt. Atlanticus Minotaur Goff and Baltimore’s Orpheus with the Awkward Foot. You’ll even find a cyclops in there—a one-eyed giant that serves as a fine introduction to our final feature, “O Brother, Where Art Thou? Revisited.” Fifteen years ago, the Coen brothers brought the songs of the sirens, the winds of Aeolus, and John Goodman’s gluttonous Bible-thumping Polyphemus to Mississippi and the moviegoing masses. We look back at the production and its filming locations in the Magnolia State that managed to capture the magic of ancient Greece and the lands Odysseus visited during his mythic journey.

Life is a poem and a journey—a sonnet and an odyssey. Write it, mythically, on the road.
Seguir leyendo leer menos
Fuel your road trip dream with American Road magazine! American Road magazine is the official travel guide to exploring North America’s back roads. Find unique and affordable road trips, ideas, maps, diners, motels, and roadside attractions in every issue to plan the journey of a lifetime!

omo abonado recibirá las siguientes ventajas:


•  Un descuento sobre el PVP de su revista
•  Su revista en su dispositivo cada mes
•  Nunca te perderás un número
•  Estás protegido de las subidas de precios que puedan producirse más adelante en el año

Recibirás 4 problemas durante un año American Road suscripción a la revista.

Nota: Las ediciones digitales no incluyen los artículos de portada ni los suplementos que encontraría en los ejemplares impresos.

Su compra aquí en Pocketmags.com puede leerse en cualquiera de las siguientes plataformas.


Puedes leer aquí en el sitio web o descargar la aplicación para tu plataforma, sólo recuerda iniciar sesión con tu nombre de usuario y contraseña de Pocketmags.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
La aplicación Pocketmags funciona en todos los dispositivos iPad y iPhone con iOS 13.0 o superior, Android 8.0 o superior y Fire Tablet (Gen 3) o superior. Nuestro lector web funciona con cualquier navegador compatible con HTML5, para PC y Mac recomendamos Chrome o Firefox.

Para iOS recomendamos cualquier dispositivo que pueda ejecutar el último iOS para un mejor rendimiento y estabilidad. Los modelos anteriores con especificaciones de procesador y RAM inferiores pueden experimentar una renderización de páginas más lenta y fallos ocasionales de la aplicación que están fuera de nuestro control.
4,3
/5
Basado en 3 Opiniones de los clientes
5
1
4
2
3
0
2
0
1
0
Ver comentarios

Artículos de este número


A continuación encontrará una selección de artículos en American Road Summer 2016.