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Hella Nation

Looking for Happy Meals in Kandahar, Rocking the Side Pipe, Wingnut's War Against the GAP, and Other Adventures with the Totally Lost Tribes of America

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Read Evan Wright's posts on the Penguin Blog.
The New York Times bestselling author of Generation Kill immerses himself in even more cultures on the edge.
Evan Wright's affinity for outsiders has inspired this deeply personal journey through what he calls "the lost tribes of America." A collection of previously published pieces, Hella Nation delivers provocative accounts of sex workers in Porn Valley, a Hollywood über-agent-turned-war documentarian and hero of America's far right, runaway teens earning corporate dollars as skateboard pitchmen, radical anarchists plotting the overthrow of corporate America, and young American troops on the hunt for terrorists in the combat zones of the Middle East
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 2, 2009
      Rolling Stone writer Wright (Generation Kill
      ), offers 12 tales of outsiders, people more or less living off the grid in mainstream America. He profiles, for example, a member of Delta Company in Kandahar in southeastern Afghanistan dueling with the Taliban; a fun-loving regular at a dance hall; a committed local anarchist engaging in street theater at a global trade conference; a pastor of the Aryan Nation preaching against the evils of blacks and Jews and other nonwhite “mud people”; and two HIV-infected former porn stars. As a former editor of Hustler
      magazine, Wright recognizes the magic in Seth Warshavsky, a con man with a mind full of schemes in the porn world of bartered desire. There is some top-drawer writing among weaker essays, but the total effect reflects a literary rebel who wants to break convention.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2009
      A dozen unforgettable reports from the underbelly of American life, from Vanity Fair contributing editor Wright (Generation Kill: Devil Dogs, Iceman, Captain America and the New Face of American War, 2004).

      Shunning the"gonzo journalism" tag associated with the late Hunter S. Thompson, Wright notes that his work"has always been to focus on my subjects in all their imperfect glory." Well, almost: Two essays deal with Wright's adventures a decade ago in the pornography industry, at Hustler and at Internet Entertainment Group, where he worked for Seth Warshavsky,"the first and greatest con artist of the digital era." That background, along with his past struggles with drugs and alcohol, dissolves some of the traditional distance between reporter and subject. Whether covering skateboarders, Seattle anti-globalism protestors and ecoterrorists, neo-Nazis or peddlers of human-growth hormone, Wright investigates what he calls"rejectionists" of the American Dream without romanticizing or condescending. He may not approach these outsiders and misfits with the kind of raffish affection displayed by legendary New Yorker nonfiction chroniclers Joseph Mitchell and A.J. Liebling, but Wright's reports are every bit as memorable. His Mötley Crüe profile depicts the heavy-metal group as more cretinous than the fictional Spinal Tap. The quotes are frequently profane and virtually always pungent—for example, former Hollywood agent and sometime substance abuser Pat Dollard, ready to start bingeing again, urges the author:"Let's take ten grand, go to Las Vegas, get a bunch of hookers and blow, and have fun for a few days"—and Wright's sensory descriptions are searing, as when he evokes the discomfort of American soldiers in Afghanistan:"The first hot winds of the morning bear an overwhelming smell of raw sewage, spiced with the odor of disinfectant from the latrines outside the tent, not to mention occasional gusts of diesel fuel blowing off the line of helicopters on the nearby runway."

      Vivid confirmation of the arrival of a major chronicler of those who live on or beyond the margins of the American mainstream.

      (COPYRIGHT (2009) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2009
      Readers of Generation Kill (2004), which recounted Wrights experiences as an embedded reporter in Iraq, will definitely want to pick up this hugely entertaining book. So will fans of first-person journalism of the sort practiced by Hunter S. Thompson and Tom Wolfe. These previously published essays are funny, mesmerizing, frightening, and mind-boggling (sometimes all in the same essay). Wright profiles, among others, an Internet fraudster, an anarchist, a neo-Nazi preacher, an eccentric Hollywood agent turned documentarian, and an ultimate fighter. Wright, who cut his journalistic teeth as the entertainment editor for Hustler, is an engaging storyteller who writes nonfiction with the eye and voice of a novelist. Seeminglyand commendablyuninterested in run-of-the-mill, just-the-facts magazine profiles, Wright instead offers up fully textured portraits of his subjects, detailed pictures in words. He tells us not just what they say, but who they are, and (as much as possible) why they are the way they are. Gonzo journalism lives.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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