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Authors: Tony Horwitz

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Baygon:
the brand name of a strong insect repellent.

bitumen:
road surface, tar.

bonnet:
the hood of a car.

boot:
the trunk of a car.

bottle shop:
a liquor store.

bowser:
a pump.

bush balladeers:
a group of poets who wrote about rural Australia.

bush tucker:
berries, roots, and other foods gathered in the outback.

bustard:
a turkey.

chuck a sickie:
take a sick day.

cockie:
slang phrase for “farmer.”

corroboree:
celebratory gathering of Aborigines.

cot:
a colloquialism for “bed.”

crook:
sick, spoiled, broken.

dag end:
the grubby bit of wool around a sheep’s butt.
Daggy
is also used to describe an unfashionable person.

damper:
a cakelike bread, traditionally cooked in campfire ash.

Digger:
slang for “veteran,” or, sometimes, simply an Australian.

dingo:
a wild dog.

Do the Right Thing:
advertising phrase used to discourage littering.

dole:
welfare.
Dole-bludgers
are welfare cheats.

drover:
a person who herds and moves stock, feeding it along the way.

dunny:
slang for “outhouse” or “toilet.”

egg nishner:
rhyming slang for “air-conditioner.”

emu:
a flightless, ostrichlike bird.

fair dinkum:
genuine, “tru-blu” Australian.

fibro:
cheap housing material.

Fourex, or XXXX:
a beer brand common in Queensland.

’gins:
short for “Aborigines”; derogatory.

geek:
freak or hayseed.

goanna:
an Australian lizard.

Grace Brothers:
a chain of department stores.

greenies:
slang for “environmentalists.”

Holden:
a line of large Australian cars.

humpie:
a lean-to or shack in Aboriginal communities.

Kelly, Ned:
an antihero bankrobber of the nineteenth century, like Jesse James.

kip:
a nap.

Kombi Van:
a large recreational vehicle.

lolly:
candy.

Lucky Country:
a famous phrase, often used ironically, that refers to Australia’s plentiful minerals and other assets.

Maori:
the native people of New Zealand, Polynesian in appearance.

middy:
a small glass of beer.

muesli:
a breakfast cereal like granola.

mug:
a fool or sucker.

mulga:
a low shrub common in the outback.

new, old:
light and dark types of beer.

ocker:
an unsophisticated or redneck Australian; noun or adjective.

pad
(as in cattle pad): cowpie or manure.

piss:
slang for “beer” or “alcohol.”
Pissed as a newt
means to be very drunk.

plonk:
alcohol, usually cheap stuff.

pokies:
slot machines.

quid:
slang for “dollar” or “money.”

ratbag:
a ranter, dogmatist, proponent of unpopular causes.

road train:
a long-distance truck, often with three trailers.

RSL:
Returned Services League, a veterans organization.

sandpit:
a sandbox.
Sandshoes
are sneakers.

schooner:
a large glass of beer.

scrum:
a huddlelike formation in rugby.

Sheep’s back:
a phrase denoting Australia’s traditional dependence on wool, as in “Australia is a country that rides on the sheep’s back.”

sheila:
a sexist word for a woman, like “bird” or “chick.”

she’ll be jake
, or
she’ll be right:
nothing to worry about. Stay cool.

shout, shouting:
buy a round, usually beer, as in “It’s my shout.” Traditionally, if several people go to a pub together, each shouts a round.

singlet:
a sleeveless T-shirt.

slog:
a strenuous activity or walk, i.e., “a hard slog.”

spinifex:
spiky grass common in the outback.

station:
a large grazing property or farm.

stinker:
an extremely hot day.

stubbies:
small bottles of beer; also, men’s shorts.

subeditor:
a copy editor.

swagman:
a tramp or itinerant laborer.
Swag
is a bedroll.

ta:
an abbreviation for “thank you.”

TAB:
the equivalent of off-track betting parlor.

Tasmanian tiger:
a doglike marsupial, believed to be extinct.

thongs:
flip-flops.

tinnie:
a can of beer.

Tobruk:
a grueling WWII battle in North Africa.

Tooth’s Old:
a brand of dark beer.

Top End:
the top of the Northern Territory, taking in Darwin.

troppo:
short for “tropical.” It usually refers to the lassitude of Australia’s hot north, or to going crazy or becoming lazy from the heat, as in “go troppo.”

tucker:
food.

two-up:
a gambling game in which two coins are flipped, popularized by WWI veterans. Now illegal, but widely played on Anzac Day.

ute:
short for “utility truck,” such as a pickup truck.

windscreen:
a windshield.

wirly-wirly:
small, tornadolike gusts of wind.

wogs:
immigrants, usually Italian; derogatory.

wombat:
large, low-slung marsupial, like a very fat, grounded koala.

wowser:
a teetotaler, sometimes aggressively so.

yakka:
work, as in “hard yakka.”

yarn:
a tale.

yonks:
a long time.

… ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The author wishes to acknowledge the following sources from which material has been reprinted:

“Folsom Prison Blues” by Johnny Cash.

“The Biggest Disappointment” and “Camooweal” by Slim Dusty.

“The Waste Land” and “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” from
Collected Poems 1909–1962
by T. S. Eliot. Copyright © 1963, 1964 by T. S. Eliot.

“Take It Easy” by Jackson Browne and Glenn Frey. Copyright © by Swallow Turn Music.

“Once in a Lifetime.” Copyright © 1980, 1981 by Bleu Disque Music Co., Inc., Index Music Inc., and E. G. Music Ltd. All rights reserved.

Tony Horwitz is a staff writer for
The New Yorker
and a former foreign correspondent who has reported from Australia, the Middle East, Africa, and eastern Europe. His awards include the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting and the Overseas Press Club award for best foreign news reporting. He is also the author of two national bestsellers,
Baghdad Without a Map
and
Confederates in the Attic
. Horwitz lives in Virginia with his wife and son.

Books by Tony Horwitz

Confederates in the Attic

Baghdad Without a Map

One for the Road

SECOND VINTAGE DEPARTURES EDITION, SEPTEMBER 1999

Copyright © 1987 by Tony Horwitz

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published in slightly different form in Australia by Harper & Row Pty Limited, Sydney, in 1987, and in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, in 1988.

Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage Departures and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

The Library of Congress has cataloged the first
Vintage Departures edition as follows:
Horwitz, Tony, 1958–
One for the road.

(Vintage Departures)
Reprint. Originally published: Sydney; New York: Harper & Row, 1987.
1. Australia—Description and travel—1981–. 2. Hitchhiking—Australia.
3. Horwitz, Tony, 1958–. I. Title.
DU105.2.H67   1988 919.4′0463   87-40476
eISBN: 978-0-307-76302-0

www.vintagebooks.com

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