American Romances
Essays
Format:Paperback
Publisher:City Lights Books
Published:18th Jun '09
Currently unavailable, our supplier has not provided us a restock date
Brown is an established, highly regarded author who has been well reviewed in a number of top tier newspapers, magazines, and literary reviews. We will pursue reviews for her in these publications, as well as publications in the Seattle area (Brown's hometown). Radio: KQED's "The Writer's Block" Print: New York Times, SF Chronicle, Seattle Times, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Stranger, Real Change, Seattle Magazine, SF Weekly, SF Bay Guardian, Village Voice, The Oregonian, San Francisco Bay Times, The Advocate, Bitch Magazine, Utne Reader, New Yorker, New York Review of Books, Harvard Gay & Lesbian Review, The Paris Review (Many of these have reviewed Brown's work before)
New England Puritanism meets West Coast hedonism in an inventive remix of America's cultural history."Everything and nothing is sacred in Rebecca Brown's essays. Tongue, word, thought, and intellect all conspire in a free language love of living history, divination, sex, solitude and amusement. She is America's only real rock n' roll schoolteacher. Lessons layered with profundity and protracted parallels. Where old world religion, Gertrude Stein and Oreo cookies co-exist in an actual and mystic world of wonder." --Thurston Moore, Sonic Youth "If Rebecca Brown's talent for prose were any tighter, it would be a lyric -- to a pop standard. An homage -- a menage -- to America, exposing what's laid bare in a comic tragic redux. I laughed till it hurt." --Van Dyke Parks, Composer/Arranger "Anyone who can get from the Eucharist, to a Necco Wafer, to the goo beween the Oreo wafers, to the Inquisition, to the goo between the legs of excited young women is a distant sibling of mine. She can dash and she can drift and she is not much interested in the really bad parts that might qualify as confession. She likes the float of quotidian living and I like to read the words upon which she floats." -- Dave Hickey, author of Air Guitar The impulse to tell our worst to a bunch of strangers has been fueling American self-hood for 300 years: there's a direct line from the Puritan confession narrative to today's lurid, inescapable exhibitionism. But whose stories are we telling? This collection of mordant, poignant, and playful essays shows Rebecca Brown at the height of her imaginative and intuitive powers. A wry, incisive social and literary critique is couched in a gonzo mix of pop culture, autobiography, fiction, literary history, misremembered movie plots, and fantasy that plays with the notion of what it is to be "American." Fantastical connections and unlikely meetings span the course of America's cultural history in a manic remix, featuring appearances by Brian Wilson, Gertrude Stein, Nathaniel Hawthorne, the Invisible Man, the Abligensian Crusade, John Wayne, Felix Mendelssohn, JFK, Shane, and God. Rebecca Brown's books include: The Gifts of the Body, The Last Time I Saw You, The Haunted House, Terrible Girls, and The End of Youth.
"Rebecca Brown's newest collection of short fiction pulses with desires that cannot be attained--knowledge, understanding, quiescence, and love. . . . The straightforward prose style belies Brown's penchant for brilliant narrative, which at any moment can turn from the gentle and intimate to the violent and bizarre." - Utne Reader "She is one of the few truly original modern lesbian writers, one who constantly pushes both her own boundaries and those of her readers." - San Francisco Chronicle
- Winner of Triangle Awards (Lesbian Nonfiction) 2010
ISBN: 9780872864986
Dimensions: 205mm x 144mm x 15mm
Weight: 212g
256 pages