Dear Great
Book Guru, I was at Sea Cliff Beach for breakfast the other day (amazing
avocado toast by Foster’s Javier!} when the question of parking came up. Most people would prefer to walk to the beach
but that walk back up the hill discourages even the most fit… so many drive
leaving everyone with the search for parking and it can be quite a search.
Someone mentioned a book which deals with parking and its ramifications. Does this sound
familiar? Seaside Parker
Dear Seaside
Parker, I recently read a quirky albeit fascinating book by Henry Graber: PAVED
PARADISE- How Parking Explains the World. Graber’s contention is that parking
has had a crushing effect on multiple aspects of American life. Since the
advent of the car, we have spent precious resources and demolished our homes
and cities in a quest for increased car storage. Our most valuable real estate is handed over
for largely free car storage, while curbside parking changes businesses,
residences, and our very image of self. Public transit is sacrificed to the
gods of car storage, zoning laws are predicated on it, and public space is curtailed – all so that
there are “homes” for cars. Graber travels across the country from New York
City to Los Angeles and every major city in between to show the impact of car
parking. He goes so far as to blame the present housing shortage and rise in
homelessness to this obsession with parking. His goal is to show us the folly
of our present day thinking and to offer us solutions for this perceived
madness. Recommended!
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