Synopses & Reviews
Andrei Codrescu, longtime observer and commentator on things odd and American, takes us on a personal tour through our withered yet increasingly alluring urban landscapes. Our trusted, if sometimes irreverent, guide visits New York, Baltimore, New Orleans, Little Rock, San Antonio, Albuquerque, Las Vegas, San Francisco, and Portland, Oregon (and points beyond, including Oxford, Mississippi; Salem, Oregon; and California's seaside jewel, La Jolla). Codrescu - while recognizing that cities are under attack by the political right, buffeted by the ever-proliferating prefab town house, beset by crime, and questioned from within - shows us that they are also still flourishing, in fact becoming invaluable models of multiethnic, multicultural living. Taken together, these striking urban portraits sound an extremely hopeful message as Codrescu astutely considers "the city as wilderness," a place where the ecology of human desires and the work of the mind find their optimum conditions.
Review
"Andrei Codrescu is a startlingly original explainer of places who manages to be as entertaining as he is perceptive. With
Hail Babylon! he is his usual self: informed, irreverent, and droll--the perfect traveling companion." --
John Berendt, author of
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil"Andrei Codrescu makes a delightful traveling companion... Chance encounters are sure to be memorable when you're traveling with Andrei Codrescu." --San Diego Union-Tribune
"At the end of the 20th century we must not only reassess our natural resources, but we must also reevaluate our urban landscapes, and Andrei Codrescu is just the person to do it." --New Orleans Time-Picayune
Synopsis
Andrei Codrescu takes us cross-country through the withered, yet alluring American urban landscape, visiting New York, Baltimore, New Orleans, Little Rock, San Antonio, Albuquerque, Las Vegas, and Portland, Oregon. He discovers that cities are at the very center of the forces determining our future, in this major work by one of America's most gifted social critics.
About the Author
Andrei Codrescu has been on NPR's "All Things Considered" for more than ten years, and is a professor of English at LSU. He lives in New Orleans.