Traffic: Why we drive the way we do (and what it says about us)

Traffic: Why we drive the way we do (and what it says about us)

by TomVanderbilt (Author)

Synopsis

Get stuck in ...Why do some people become demons when they get behind a wheel? Why does the other lane always move faster? Why do New Yorkers jaywalk (and nobody does in Cophenhagen)? And why should you never drive with any beer-drinking, divorced doctors named Fred? Driving is about far more than getting from A to B. As Tom Vanderbilt's brilliant, curiosity-filled book shows, it's actually the key to deciphering human nature and ...well, pretty much everything. From the etiquette of horn-honking to bumper stickers you should avoid, from gridlock in ancient Rome to why getting rid of road signs actually reduces accidents, Traffic will change the way you see yourself, and other people (and not just through your windscreen).

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 416
Publisher: Penguin
Published: 06 Aug 2009

ISBN 10: 0141027398
ISBN 13: 9780141027395

Media Reviews
Traffic gets about as close to the heart of modern existence as any book could get . . . Engagingly written, meticulously researched, endlessly interesting and informative, [it] is one of those rare books that comes out of the depths of nowhere.
-Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post Book World

A surprising, enlightening look at the psychology of human beings behind the steering wheels . . . Jammed with delicious you've-got-to-be-kidding moments . . . My solution to the nation's vehicular woes would be to make this good book required reading for anyone applying for a driver's license.
-Mary Roach, The New York Times Book Review

Smart and comprehensive . . . A shrewd tour of the much-experienced but little-understood world of driving . . . A balanced and instructive discussion on how to improve our policies toward the inexorable car . . . Vanderbilt's book is likely to remain relevant well into the new century.
-Edward L. Glaeser, The New Republic

A delightful tour through the mysteries and manners of driving. -Tony Dokoupil, Newsweek

A breezy . . . well-researched . . . examination of the strange interaction of humanity and multiton metal boxes that can roar along at . . . 60 m.p.h. or sit for hours in bumper-to-bumper traffic.
-Patrick T. Reardon, Chicago Tribune

Traffic will definitely change the way you think about driving, which also means changing the way you think about being human.
-Michael Agger, Slate
[A] joyride in the often surprising landscape of traffic science and psychology.
-Abigail Tucker, Smithsonian Magazine
Tom Vanderbilt is one of our best and most interesting writers, with anextraordinary knack for looking at everyday life and explaining, in wonderful and entertaining detail, how it really works. That's never been more true than with Traffic, where he takes a subject that we all deal with (and worry about), and lets us see it through new eyes. In the process, he helps us understand better not just the highway, but the world. It doesn't matter whether you drive or take the bus--you're going to want to read this book.
--James Surowiecki, author of The Wisdom of Crowds

A great, deep, multidisciplinary investigation of the dynamics and the psychology of traffic jams. It is fun to read. Anyone who spends more than 19 minutes a day in traffic should read this book.
--Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author The Black Swan
Fascinating, illuminating, and endlessly entertaining as well. Vanderbilt shows how a sophisticated understanding of human behavior can illuminate one of the modern world's most basic and most mysterious endeavors. You'll learn a lot; and the life you save may be your own.
--Cass R. Sunstein, coauthor of Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness

Everyone who drives--and many people who don't--should read this book. It is a psychology book, a popular science book, and a how-to-save-your-life manual, all rolled into one. I found it gripping and fascinating from the very beginning to the very end.
--Tyler Cowen, author of Discover Your Inner Economist
Fascinating, surprising . . . Vanderbilt's book will be a revelation not just to us drivers but also, one might guess, to our policy makers.
-Alan Moores, The Seattle Times

A well-written, important book that should hold theinterest of anyone who drives a car.
-Dennis Lythgoe, Deseret News

An engaging, sociable tour of all things driving-related.
-Joel Rice, The Tennessean

Manages to be downright fun.
-Dennis Simanaitis, Road and Track

Traffic changes the way you think about driving. For that reason alone, it deserves your attention.
-Dan Danbom, Rocky Mountain News

Intriguing . . . Somehow manages to plunge far more deeply than one would imagine a meditation on travel possibly could. Perhaps without intending to, Vanderbilt has narrowed in on the central question of our time . . . His book asks us to consider how we can persuade human beings to behave more cooperatively than selfishly.
-Elaine Margolin, The Denver Post

Vanderbilt investigates . . . complexities with zeal. Surprising details abound.
- The New Yorker

Fresh and timely . . . Vanderbilt investigates how human nature has shaped traffic, and vice versa, finally answering drivers' most familiar and frustrating questions.
-- Publishers Weekly

Fluently written and oddly entertaining, full of points to ponder while stuck at the on-ramp meter or an endless red light.
-- Kirkus
This may be the most insightful and comprehensive study ever done of driving behavior and how it reveals truths about the types of people we are.
-- Booklist
Tom Vanderbilt uncovers a raft of counterintuitive facts about what happens when we get behind the wheel, and why.
-- BusinessWeek
Fascinating . . . Could not come at a better time.
-- Library Journal
Brisk . . . Smart . . . Delivers a wealth of automotive insights both curious andcounterintuitive.
- Details

A literate, sobering look at our roadways that explains why the other lane is moving faster and why you should never drive at 1 p.m. on Saturday.
-- GQ
An engaging, informative, psychologically savvy account of the conscious and unconscious assumptions of individual drivers-and the variations in 'car culture' around the world . . . Full of fascinating facts and provocative propositions.
-Glenn Altschuler, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

An engrossing tour through the neuroscience of highway illusions, the psychology of late merging, and other existential driving dilemmas.
-Michael Mason, Discover

Funny . . . Enlightening . . . Want to spend 286 pages having a good time and learning a whole lot about something you do every day for an hour or two? Buy this book.
-Ben Wear, Austin American-Statesman
I'm very glad I read this book . . . It tells you a lot about traffic. But of course it does more than this. It's really a book about human nature.
-William Leith, Evening Standard (UK)
A richly extended metaphor for the challenge of organising competing human needs and imperfect human judgment into harmonious coexistence.
-Rafael Behr, The Guardian (UK)
Automobile traffic is one of the most studied phenomena in advanced societies . . . Mr. Vanderbilt has mastered all of it. Arresting facts appear on every page.
-Christopher Caldwell, Financial Times (UK)

From the Hardcover edition.


A surprising, enlightening look at the psychology of human beings behind the steering wheels.... Jammed with delicious you've-got-to-be kidding moments.... Required reading for anyone applying for a driver's license.
-- The New York Times Book Review
Fascinating, surprising . . . Vanderbilt's book will be a revelation not just to us drivers but also, one might guess, to our policy makers.
- Alan Moores, The Seattle Times
Traffic gets about as close to the heart of modern existence as any book could get . . . Engagingly written, meticulously researched, endlessly interesting and informative, [it] is one of those rare books that comes out of the depths of nowhere.
-Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post Book World
An engaging, informative, psychologically savvy account of the conscious and unconscious assumptions of individual drivers.... Full of fascinating facts and provocative propositions.
--Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
An engrossing tour through the neuroscience of highway illusions, the psychology of late merging, and other existential driving dilemmas.
--Discover
Manages to be downright fun.
--Road and Track
Smart and comprehensive . . . A shrewd tour of the much-experienced but little-understood world of driving . . . A balanced and instructive discussion on how to improve our policies toward the inexorable car . . . Vanderbilt's book is likely to remain relevant well into the new century.
- Edward L. Glaeser, T he New Republic
A delightful tour through the mysteries and manners of driving. -Tony Dokoupil, Newsweek
A breezy . . . well-researched . . . examination of the strange interaction ofhumanity and multiton metal boxes that can roar along at . . . 60 m.p.h. or sit for hours in bumper-to-bumper traffic.
- Patrick T. Reardon, Chicago Tribune
Traffic will definitely change the way you think about driving, which also means changing the way you think about being human.
-Michael Agger, Slate
[A] joyride in the often surprising landscape of traffic science and psychology.
- Abigail Tucker, Smithsonian Magazine
Tom Vanderbilt is one of our best and most interesting writers, with an extraordinary knack for looking at everyday life and explaining, in wonderful and entertaining detail, how it really works. That's never been more true than with Traffic, where he takes a subject that we all deal with (and worry about), and lets us see it through new eyes. In the process, he helps us understand better not just the highway, but the world. It doesn't matter whether you drive or take the bus--you're going to want to read this book.
--James Surowiecki, author of The Wisdom of Crowds
A great, deep, multidisciplinary investigation of the dynamics and the psychology of traffic jams. It is fun to read. Anyone who spends more than 19 minutes a day in traffic should read this book.
--Nassim Nicholas Taleb, author The Black Swan
Fascinating, illuminating, and endlessly entertaining as well. Vanderbilt shows how a sophisticated understanding of human behavior can illuminate one of the modern world's most basic and most mysterious endeavors. You'll learn a lot; and the life you save may be your own.
--Cass R. Sunstein, coauthor of Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness
Everyone who drives--and manypeople who don't--should read this book. It is a psychology book, a popular science book, and a how-to-save-your-life manual, all rolled into one. I found it gripping and fascinating from the very beginning to the very end.
--Tyler Cowen, author of Discover Your Inner Economist
A well-written, important book that should hold the interest of anyone who drives a car.
-Dennis Lythgoe, Deseret News
An engaging, sociable tour of all things driving-related.
-Joel Rice, The Tennessean
Traffic changes the way you think about driving. For that reason alone, it deserves your attention.
-Dan Danbom, Rocky Mountain News Intriguing . . . Somehow manages to plunge far more deeply than one would imagine a meditation on travel possibly could. Perhaps without intending to, Vanderbilt has narrowed in on the central question of our time . . . His book asks us to consider how we can persuade human beings to behave more cooperatively than selfishly.
-Elaine Margolin, The Denver Post
Vanderbilt investigates . . . complexities with zeal. Surprising details abound.
-The New Yorker
Fresh and timely . . . Vanderbilt investigates how human nature has shaped traffic, and vice versa, finally answering drivers' most familiar and frustrating questions.
--Publishers Weekly
Fluently written and oddly entertaining, full of points to ponder while stuck at the on-ramp meter or an endless red light.
--Kirkus
This may be the most insightful and comprehensive study ever done of driving behavior and how it reveals truths about the types of people we are.
--Booklist
Tom Vanderbilt uncovers a raft of counterintuitive factsabout what happens when we get behind the wheel, and why.
--BusinessWeek
Fascinating . . . Could not come at a better time.
--Library Journal
Brisk . . . Smart . . . Delivers a wealth of automotive insights both curious and counterintuitive.
-Details
A literate, sobering look at our roadways that explains why the other lane is moving faster and why you should never drive at 1 p.m. on Saturday.
--GQ

An engrossing tour through the neuroscience of highway illusions, the psychology of late merging, and other existential driving dilemmas.
-Michael Mason, Discover
Funny . . . Enlightening . . . Want to spend 286 pages having a good time and learning a whole lot about something you do every day for an hour or two? Buy this book.
-Ben Wear, Austin American-Statesman
I'm very glad I read this book . . . It tells you a lot about traffic. But of course it does more than this. It's really a book about human nature.
-William Leith, Evening Standard (UK)
A richly extended metaphor for the challenge of organising competing human needs and imperfect human judgment into harmonious coexistence.
-Rafael Behr, The Guardian (UK)
Automobile traffic is one of the most studied phenomena in advanced societies . . . Mr. Vanderbilt has mastered all of it. Arresting facts appear on every page.
-Christopher Caldwell, Financial Times (UK)

Author Bio
Tom Vanderbilt writes on design, technology, science, and culture for many publications, including Wired, Slate, The London Review of Books, The Wall Street Journal, Artforum, Rolling Stone, The New York Times Magazine and Popular Science. He is contributing editor to award-winning design magazines I.D. and Print, contributing editor to Business Week Online, and contributing writer of the popular blog Design Observer. He is the author of two previous books: Survival City: Adventures Among the Ruins of Atomic America and The Sneaker Book.