The A303 is one of the essential routes of English motoring promising to whisk the traveller towards the green & honeyed lands of Somerset & the far west to a world of holidays & escape (although these journeys all too often grind to a standstill.) Yet the 303 is more than a road. It is a story. Four-&-a-half thousand years ago the bluestones of Stonehenge were conveyed west from the river Avon along a small section of its route. Roman roads crossed it & drovers paths lie beneath it. Its route cuts across some of the finest chalkland in southern Engl&. Tom Fort wanders across the summits of the downs takes in the views & investigates the evidence of ancient habitation & worship. He samples the fare at the Willoughby Hedge Cafe legendary among truckers. He seeks out service stations & inns & turnpike toll houses; tells stories of dreadful crashes & highway robberies; of solstice seekers & Stonehenge; of Queen Guinevere & Sir Launcelot; of army camps & racing tracks; Battles & festivals; of churches abbeys farms houses burial mounds trout fishermen & falconers. Digging in dark corners exploring long-forgotten byways & poring over ancient maps Tom Fort has created a book of travel & of social & cultural history as alive to the England of 3000 BC as the England of 2012 AD.