Books •
All the Strange Hours: The Excavation of a Life, by
Loren Eiseley, 1975. •
American Travels of a Dutch Hobo 1923–1926, by , 1984, . •
A Period of Juvenile Prosperity (2013) by
Mike Brodie, •
The Areas of My Expertise by
John Hodgman - Humor book which features a lengthy section on hobos, including a list of 700 hobo names which spawned an online effort to illustrate the complete list. •
The Autobiography of a Super-Tramp, by
W. H. Davies, 1908 •
Bottom Dogs, by
Edward Dahlberg •
Beggars of Life, (1924), by
Jim Tully •
Evasion by Anonymous •
From Coast to Coast with Jack London by "A-No.-1" (
Leon Ray Livingston) •
Hobo, by Eddy Joe Cotton, 2002. •
The Hobo - The Sociology of the Homeless Man, by
Nels Anderson, 1923. •
Ironweed by
William Kennedy, 1983. A
Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, also adapted for a 1987 film (see below). •
The Jungle by
Upton Sinclair contains a section in which the main character,
Jurgis Rudkus, abandons his family in Chicago and becomes a hobo for a while. •
Lonesome Traveler, by
Jack Kerouac ("The Vanishing American Hobo") •
The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by
Kate DiCamillo •
Muzzlers, Guzzlers, and Good Yeggs by
Joe Coleman •
Of Mice and Men, by
John Steinbeck •
On the Road, by Jack Kerouac •
One More Train to Ride: The Underground World of Modern American Hobos by
Clifford Williams. • ''Ramblin' Boy: The Letters of Steve Hoyt'' edited and with commentary by Daniel Leen, ISBN 0-9632912-9-7, publisher Ecodesigns Northwest Publishers •
Riding the Rails: Teenagers on the Move During the Great Depression by
Errol Lincoln Uys, (Routledge, 2003) •
Riding Toward Everywhere by
William T. Vollmann, 2008. •
The Road (1907), by
Jack London • ''Rolling Nowhere: Riding the Rails with America's Hoboes'' by
Ted Conover - Paperback: 304 pages, Publisher: Vintage (2001), •
Sister of The Road: The Autobiography of Boxcar Bertha - (as told to) Dr.
Ben Reitman •
Stumptown Kid, By Carol Gorman and Ron J. Finley •
Tramping on Life (1922) and
More Miles (1926), by
Harry Kemp •
Tramping with Tramps (1899) by
Josiah Flynt •
Waiting for Nothing,
Tom Kromer •
Wild Honey (1927), by
Frederick Niven • ''
You Can't Win'', by
Jack Black •
Yankee Hobo in the Orient, (1943), by
John Patric •
Down and Out in Paris and London, by
George Orwell Comics •
Kings in Disguise (1988), by
James Vance and
Dan Burr •
Laugh-Out-Loud Cats,
webcomic by
Adam Koford, featuring two anthropomorphic cats as hobos. • The
Avenger and master archer in
Marvel Comics,
Hawkeye, is aware of, and can read hobo code in
Matt Fraction and
David Aja's 2012 run on the character. •
USA Comics #2 (1941) introduced Vagabond, a police officer named Pat Murphy who created an alter ego, Chauncey Throttlebottom III, a well-spoken hobo, to fight crime. •
USA Comics #5 (1941) had a character, Butch Brogan, alias Fighting Hobo, that helps save a kidnapped puppy in "The Dog-Nappers". • The
TaleSpin comic
The Long Flight Home reveals
Kit Cloudkicker was once a hobo prior to working for
Don Karnage.
Documentaries •
Hobo (1992), a documentary by John T. Davis, following the life of a hobo on his travels through the United States. •
American Experience, "
Riding the Rails" (1999), a
PBS documentary by Lexy Lovell and Michael Uys, narrated by
Richard Thomas, detailing the hobos of the
Great Depression, with interviews of those who rode the rails during those years. •
The American Hobo (2003), a documentary narrated by
Ernest Borgnine featuring interviews with
Merle Haggard and
James Michener. •
The Human Experience, (2008), a documentary by Charles Kinnane. The first experience follows Jeffrey and his brother Clifford to the streets of New York City where the boys live with the homeless for a week in one of the coldest winters on record. The boys look for hope and camaraderie among their homeless companions, learning how to survive on the streets.
Fictional characters Examples of characters based on hobos include: •
Charlie Chaplin's "
Little Tramp" •
Emmett Kelly's "Weary Willy" •
Red Skelton's "Freddy the Freeloader" • "Bagdad, Hobo Detective," featured in the
pulp magazine Popular Detective (1937 & 1938)
Films and
Jackie Coogan in
The Kid, 1921 •
The Circus (1928), directed by Charlie Chaplin. •
Beggars of Life (1928), directed by
William A. Wellman •
City Lights (1931), directed by Charlie Chaplin. •
Number Seventeen (1932), directed by
Alfred Hitchcock. •
Wild Boys of the Road (1933), directed by William A. Wellman. •
City Limits (1934), directed by
William Nigh. •
Modern Times (1936), directed by Charlie Chaplin. •
Father Steps Out (1941), directed by
Jean Yarbrough. • ''
Sullivan's Travels'' (1941), directed by
Preston Sturges. •
Jack London (1943), biopic directed by
Alfred Santell. •
It Happened on Fifth Avenue (1947), directed by
Roy Del Ruth. •
Joe Hill (1971), directed by
Bo Widerberg •
Boxcar Bertha (1972), directed by
Martin Scorsese and starring
Barbara Hershey as a sexy hobo girl during the
Great Depression. •
Emperor of the North Pole a.k.a.
Emperor of the North (1973), directed by Robert Aldrich. Loosely based on
Jack London's
The Road. •
Hard Times a.k.a.
The Streetfighter (1975), directed by
Walter Hill (his directorial debut), and starring
Charles Bronson (as a hobo turned
street fighter). •
The Billion Dollar Hobo (1977), starring
Tim Conway and
Will Geer. • ''
Pee-Wee's Big Adventure'' (1985), starring
Pee-wee Herman, directed by
Tim Burton. Pee-wee meets Hobo Jack when he hops a freight train on his way to the Alamo. •
Vagabond (1985) (French title:
Sans Toit Ni Loi), directed by Agnès Varda, tells the story of a traveling woman's untimely death through
flashbacks and interviews with the people who met her. •
The Journey of Natty Gann (1985), starring
Meredith Salenger as a young girl riding the rails to find her father. •
Ironweed (1987), directed by
Héctor Babenco and based on the
Pulitzer Prize-winning
novel by
William Kennedy, who also wrote the screenplay. •
Life Stinks (1991), directed by and starring
Mel Brooks. •
Tokyo Godfathers (2003), an
anime directed by
Satoshi Kon. •
Into the Wild (2007), directed by
Sean Penn, based on
Jon Krakauer's non-fiction book about
Christopher McCandless. •
Resurrecting the Champ (2007), starring
Samuel L. Jackson and
Josh Hartnett, directed by
Rod Lurie. •
Kit Kittredge: An American Girl (2008). •
Hobo with a Shotgun (2011), an
exploitation film directed by Jason Eisener and written by John Davies, starring
Rutger Hauer as a
vigilante hobo. •
The Muppets (2011), the film features a character named Hobo Joe (played by
Zach Galifianakis) and some
Whatnot hobos. They later appeared in the sequel
Muppets Most Wanted (2014). •
Man of Steel (2013) depicts
Clark Kent living as a homeless itinerant worker before ultimately taking the mantle of
Superman and finding work as a reporter at the
Daily Planet. •
Nomadland (2020), directed by
Chloé Zhao. • Many animated cartoons depict hobos as main or secondary characters, hobo-related activities such as traveling by train, with a
bindle, or in the company of hobos. For example,
Warner Brothers'
Box Car Blues (1930) with
Bosko,
Hobo Gadget Band (1939),
MGM's
Henpecked Hoboes (1946) with
George and Junior in their first appearance,
Mouse Wreckers (1948),
8 Ball Bunny (1950) with
Bugs Bunny, and ''
The Easter Bunny Is Comin' to Town'' (1977).
Music Artists Musicians known for hobo songs include:
Tim Barry,
Baby Gramps,
Railroad Earth,
Harry McClintock,
Ramblin' Jack Elliott,
Utah Phillips,
Jimmie Rodgers,
Seasick Steve, and
Boxcar Willie.
Songs Examples of hobo songs include: • "Ain’t Gonna Hobo No More" by
Johnny Cash • "Be a Hobo" by
Moondog • "
The Big Rock Candy Mountains" by
Harry McClintock, recorded by various artists including
Burl Ives,
Tom Waits,
Lisa Loeb,
Baby Gramps,
The Restarts and
Harry Dean Stanton • "Driver Pull" by
Tim Barry • "
Hallelujah, I'm a Bum," recorded by Harry McClintock,
Al Jolson, and others • "Hard Travelin'" by
Woody Guthrie • "
Here Comes Your Man" by the
Pixies, about hobos travelling on trains in California and dying because of earthquakes • "
Here I Go Again" by
Whitesnake, featuring the lyric, "Like a hobo I was born to walk alone," later changed to "like a drifter" • "Hobo" by
The Hackensaw Boys • "Hobo Bill", "
I Ain't Got No Home," and "Mysteries of a Hobo's Life," performed by
Cisco Houston • "Hobo Bill's Last Ride" by
Jimmy Rogers, also recorded by
Manfred Mann's Earth Band • "Hobo Blues" and "The Hobo" by
John Lee Hooker • "Hobo Chang Ba" by
Captain Beefheart • "Hobo Flats" by
Oliver Nelson • "Hobo Flats" by
Count Basie • "Hobo Jungle" by
The Band • "Hobo Humpin' Slobo Babe" by
Whale (band) • "Hobo Kinda Man" by
Lynyrd Skynyrd • "Hobo, You Can't Ride This Train" by
Louis Armstrong • "The Hobo" by
Merle Haggard • "The Hobo Song" by
John Prine, also covered by
Johnny Cash • "The Hobo Song" by
Jack Bonus, also recorded by
Jerry Garcia's bluegrass group,
Old & In the Way • "The Hobo Song" by
Kevin Roth, from the
Shining Time Station's
Christmas special, '
Tis a Gift • "
Hobo's Lullaby" (a.k.a. "Weary Hobo") by
Goebel Reeves, recorded by various artists, including
Woody Guthrie,
Arlo Guthrie,
Emmylou Harris,
Pete Seeger,
The Kingston Trio, and Ramblin' Jack Eliot • "Hobo's Meditation" by Jimmie Rodgers, recorded by
Linda Ronstadt on the album
Trio • "Hobos on Parade" by
Shannon Wright • "Homeless Brother" by
Don McLean • "Hopscotch Willie" by
Stephen Malkmus • "
I Am a Lonesome Hobo", "Only a Hobo," and "Ramblin' Gamblin' Willie" by
Bob Dylan • "
I Take a Lot of Pride in What I Am" by
Merle Haggard • "
Jack Straw" by
Robert Hunter and
Bob Weir • "
Jesus' Blood Never Failed Me Yet" a recording by composer
Gavin Bryars of a hobo singing on a London street • "
King of the Road" by
Roger Miller • "Kulkurin Valssi" (Hobo Waltz) by
Arthur Kylander • "Lännen lokari" (Western Logger) by
Hiski Salomaa • "Last of the Hobo Kings" by
Mary Gauthier • "
Like a Hobo" by
Charlie Winston • "Mary Lane" by
Fred Eaglesmith • "Morning Glory" by
Tim Buckley, lyrics by
Larry Beckett • "My Traveling Star" by
James Taylor • "Never Tire of the Road" by
Andy Irvine • "Orange Claw Hammer" by
Captain Beefheart, which contains the lyric, "I'm on the bum where the hobos run, the air breaks with filthy chatter." • "Papa Hobo" and "Hobo's Blues" by
Paul Simon • "
Ramblin' Man" by
Hank Williams Sr. • "Sergeant Small" by
Andy Irvine • "
Streets of London" by
Ralph McTell • "Waiting for a Train" by Jimmie Rodgers • "Way Out There" by Bob Nolan, recorded by the Sons of the Pioneers • "Western Hobo" by
The Carter Family Stage •
King of the Hobos (2014), a one-man musical that premiered at Emerging Artists Theatre in New York City, is centered around the death of
James Eads How, known during his lifetime as the "Millionaire Hobo".
Television •
Mad Men (season 1), episode 8, "
The Hobo Code" (2007) •
The Magic School Bus special,
A Magic School Bus Halloween, features
Lily Tomlin's character "Archibald Dauntless" •
The Littlest Hobo: long-running
Lassie-esque franchise about a roving dog that lives the hobo lifestyle • In
The Simpsons episode "
The Old Man and the Key",
Grampa explains hobo symbols to
Bart.
In another episode, the Simpsons meet a hobo who tells them American
folktales in exchange for a spongebath. •
Shameless (Season 9), Episode 10 and 11. Frank Gallagher becomes part of a hobo competition, a competition looking for the best hobo in Chicago. •
Reacher (Season 1), Episode 2. Reacher insists he is not a
vagrant, but a hobo. •
Murdoch Mysteries (Season 16), Episode 17 "The Ballad of Gentleman Jones" (2023). Murdoch investigates a series of murders of hobos in 1910
Toronto. Crabtree and Watts pose as hobos in an effort to find the killer. ==See also==