Praise for The Trip
“Fast-moving. Totally engrossing. Filled with fascinating details about Andy that even I didn’t know.”
– Pat Hackett, Andy Warhol’s diarist and co-author
“Deborah Davis calls shotgun on Andy Warhol’s era-defining 1963 cross-country road trip and thankfully takes us along for the ride. With electric storytelling and riveting prose, The Trip puts us right in the middle of the action as Andy crashed his way through Hollywood, Manhattan high society, and the heights of the art world.”
– Kevin Kwan, bestselling author of Crazy Rich Asians
“Thanks to Deborah Davis I've just been on a cross country road trip to Hollywood with Andy Warhol: 1963, the year America lost its innocence. Sure, there’s high gossip, lots of gossip—Andy wouldn’t leave home without it—but also something much more. A way of seeing things that has made Andy Warhol not just one of the most coveted artists of our age but also one of the greatest philosophers of the 20th century.”
– William Norwich, fashion editor, author of Learning to Drive
“AAA+ to Deborah Davis for her brilliant travelogue detailing Andy Warhol’s 1963 cross-country adventure. Thanks to Andy’s time capsules and Davis’ meticulous research, The Trip transports you, ‘shotgun,’ into this legendary road trip.”
– Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, photographer and filmmaker
"In The Trip…author Deborah Davis revivifies the era that made the man, and the man who helped define the era...A bang-up job!”
– Boston Globe
“…An accessible and original book…with a joie de vivre that might have delighted the man himself. As a jaunty romp through American pop-art history, the book is a light and entertaining read.”
– Washington Post
“Davis’s prose mirrors the zeitgeist Warhol brought to his art: bright, breezy, and easy to understand…an entertaining and accessible introduction to his work and a beginner’s guide to the social scene of the pop art world.”
– Publishers Weekly
“Deborah Davis’ 'The Trip: Andy Warhol’s Plastic Fantastic Cross-Country Adventure' is both the story of Warhol’s life at the moment just before stardom and a clever history of America during that period.”
– Chicago Tribune
“Deborah Davis’ chronicle of Warhol’s travels on the hipster highway, Route 66, captures the moment the artist met Hollywood and became a superstar…quite convincingly makes the case that 1963 was the year when ‘everything changed’ not only for the famed American pop artist, but for the United States as well.”
– Toronto Star
“In 1963, Andy Warhol drove from New York to Los Angeles with his friends Wynn Chamberlain, Gerard Malanga, and Taylor Mead. Deborah Davis’s new book, The Trip, an examination of this cross-country journey, argues that the brief episode in Warhol’s life was a turning point in the artist’s career. It was a metaphorical passage to fame, allowing him to become the character for which he’s remembered.”
– Artnews
"Davis’ copious research into the flotsam and jetsam of 1963 establishes the mood: She shows us the billboards lining Route 66, takes us into the motels and truck stops and listens to the pop songs on the radio…A good introduction to Warhol for pop art neophytes, The Trip will also appeal to readers eager to learn more about the Mad Men-era collision between art and advertising."
– BookPage