A Cavalcade of Lesser Horrors
By (Author) Peter Smith
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
19th October 2011
United States
General
Non Fiction
791.440228092
Paperback
200
Width 137mm, Height 216mm, Spine 18mm
We exist. We try to lead good, thoughtful lives. And while we all try our best, we cant avoid the startling moments, or we make mistakes and experience little shocks and embarrassmentsour lesser horrorsthat make us wince and come back to haunt us again and again.
For Peter Smithwhose weekly essays for Minnesota Public Radio have endeared him to thousands of listeners and readersthese awkward times are not without their humor, and a healthy dose at that. We all know the circumstances and places the lesser horrors are likely to awaitsibling rivalries, high school gym class, job successes and failures, raising children. In this series of funny, honest, and moving pieces, Smith explores a few messy episodes from his own life: growing up Catholic on the south side of Chicago, seeing his tricycle stolen before his eyes, and onward to American life in the 50s and 60s, Vietnam, and a career in advertising, where bosses feed employees anxieties to increase creativity. Along the way, Smith discovers how these moments not only help define what it is to be human but are also a major source of our inspiration and imagination.
So cover your eyes, peek through your fingers. Life is a cavalcade of lesser horrors. They may not be the easiest memories to relive, but they are often among the funniest. And by facing them squarely and perhaps even with a smile, Smith finds himself uncovering a simple reassurance, an uneasy truth we should take to heart: were all on this wild ride together.
"With precise language Peter Smith tells a good story with elegant descriptions, laced with the minor calamities of life, and woven with touches of wry humor." Star Tribune
Peter Smith (d. 2016) lived in Hopkins, Minnesota. He wrote magazine articles, fiction, poetry, an occasional op-ed piece, and was a weekly contributor to Minnesota Public Radio's Morning Edition with Cathy Wurzer.