The Age of Clear Profit: Essays on Home and the Narrow Road (Crux: The Georgia Series in Literary Nonfiction)

The Age of Clear Profit: Essays on Home and the Narrow Road (Crux: The Georgia Series in Literary Nonfiction) image
ISBN-10:

0820362816

ISBN-13:

9780820362816

Author(s): Griswold, John
Released: Sep 15, 2022
Format: Paperback, 232 pages
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Description:

Review\nThe Age of Clear Profit is an essay collection that coalesces into an artifact of compassion, clear-eyed analysis, humility, and willingness to journey with open eyes and an open heart. It is an indictment of prevalent elements of political and cultural America and a chronicling that draws from multiple threads of understanding, experience, and perspective to weave a narrative of wisdom and living insight. -- Aurelie J. Sheehan ― author of Once into the Night\nAcutely aware of the postindustrial landscape and the whitewashed distortion of American history, John Griswold sees beaches defaced by strip malls, the murky sky above the tree line, the dirty river next to the Serta factory, which happens to be where Emmett Till was tortured, executed. Details become stark metaphors. These dark, dispassionate dispatches from 'the green flash at the end of the world' are nearly anthropological. A chilling, necessary book, a tonic for blighted times. -- Debra Monroe ― author of It Takes a Worried Woman\nJohn Griswold has a wonderful eye, an acute ear, and an unerring appreciation for the ways we are simultaneously hopeful and absurd, or maybe how it is our hopes that make us absurd. The essays in The Age of Clear Profit are funny, sharp-elbowed, and wise, a series of indictments of a world that allows madness to reign by a writer who nonetheless never loses touch with his (and our) essential humanity. -- John Warner, editor of McSweeney's Internet Tendency\nAt age fifty, when many hope to slow down, and what’s left, as the poet Kobayashi Issa once wrote, is “clear profit,” John Griswold was starting over―-again―-in a position he had worked decades to achieve. His family moved down the Mississippi Valley, expecting to create a good life with new friends.\nWhat they found instead was a society “organized tightly by race, church attendance, and family name,” which in its corruption, laissez-faire corporatism, gun love, and environmental degradation foretold the heightened problems of the United States in an era of deepening political division.\nTaking his cue from classical Asian poets such as Basho, Griswold begins to journey, to gain perspective, and to find his own narrow road. He travels around the rim of the Gulf of Mexico and to writers’ homes in Russia and New Mexico; attends the protests at Standing Rock; walks the Basho Trail in Japan; and reports on the wholesale slaughter of a Texas rattlesnake roundup and the cruel weirdness of the Angola Prison Rodeo.\nOver eight years, Griswold bears witness, pays homage, and finds he is able to define and speak with gratitude about what is most important to him: his children, wholeheartedness, and the act of trying. In the gap between complexity and a little peace and quiet, there is a way to profit anew.












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