Here’s the story.
We’ve all been here before – learning
to grow up. But maybe in your case and mine a bike wasn’t the prime mover.
Well, in the novel Traveler, when the
teenager at the center of the story runs away from home on a a 1980 Schwinn
Traveler, it’s the fun and action on this special bike that teach him again and
again what it takes to grow up.
He learns the ups and downs of love
in Virginia. He is comforted by how he reacts when there is a horrible sky
diving crash in Georgia. Toward the end of the book he is caught in the
cross-fire of some drug runners in Texas. They stole his beloved Schwinn
Traveler in a clever scheme to use the bike to smuggle drugs into the U.S.A.
Author David Cheever says
the book was inspired by a classic 1980 Schwinn (it is a Traveler model Schwinn
thus the book’s title) that was donated by a doctor when Cheever worked in a
small non-profit used bike store. The doc told Cheever, ”I bought this Traveler
new in 1980 when I entered medical school in Boston. It took me faithfully to
class for four years and then for three more years of residency. That’s why
I’ve kept the bike for over 30 years. I’m donating it reluctantly.”
Cheever
was born and raised on the east coast and has been in the advertising business
in Hawaii for many years. During that time his wife Cindy has tolerated him
riding his bike solo at various times in California, Oregon, Washington,
Colorado, New York, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Washington, D.C., Virginia,
Georgia, and Texas.
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