Long Time Leaving: Dispatches from Up South
By (Author) Roy Blount
Counterpoint
Counterpoint
1st January 2009
United States
General
Non Fiction
975
Paperback
400
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 28mm
539g
In this acerbic, eminently quotable book, humorist Roy Blount Jr. focuses on his own dueling loyalties across the great American divide. Scholarly, raunchy, biting, and affable, Blount takes on topics ranging from chicken fingers and yellow dog Democrats to Elvis's toes while sharing some experiences of his own: chatting with Ray Charles, meeting an Okefenokee alligator, imagining Faulkner's tennis game, and being swept up, sort of, in the filming of Nashville. His yarns, analyses, and flights of fancy transcend all standard shades of Red, Blue, and in between.
Blount's sidesplitting, irreverent musings may not end our tacit Civil War at long last, but they do clarify, or aptly complicate, divisive delusions on both sides of the longstanding national rift. Long Time Leaving is a comic ode to American variety and a droll assault on complacency both North and South from one of the most definitive and esteemed humorists of our time.
"Blount's work is unflaggingly passionate and provocative over a range of subjects, including food, politics and all things Southern ... [His] energetic, unpredictable essays are sure-fire fan-pleasers, and fine discoveries for newcomers."
Roy Blount Jr. is the author of nineteen other books. He is a panelist on NPRs "Wait Wait . . . Dont Tell Me!" a columnist for Oxford American, a contributing editor to The Atlantic, and president of the Authors Guild. He lives in western Massachusetts.