Roy Blount, Jr. Humorist, cultural observer and journalist, author of twenty books

Long Time Leaving: Dispatches From Up South

Long Time Leaving: Dispatches From Up South

Synopsis:

Ever since beloved Southern writer Blount moved to Massachusetts, he’s been trying to use his “regional ambivalence ... to get Aunt Dixie and Uncle Sam on speaking terms.” In this diverse collection of humorous essays and occasional verse, Blount tackles a number of topics, including Emmanuel Kant, the mind-boggling “Bushy Juggernaut” and the correct grammatical usage of y’all (always plural). Concerned largely with his own pleasures and peccadilloes, Blount sings the praises of New Orleans’s jazzy Boswell sisters, staying up late and the company of Jack Russell terriers (“like living with a movie star who seems to be able to handle quite a lot of cocaine”). On the other hand, Tom DeLay of Texas gets called “the thinking person’s Satan,” Garth Brooks and Forrest Gump both receive snubs, and caring about college sports in the Northeast draws comparison to “caring about French food in South Carolina.” Adorned with poetical lists and quirky details, Blount’s work is unflaggingly passionate and provocative over a range of subjects, including food, politics and all things Southern, and he’s as likely to quote The Women’s Times as Shakespeare or Zora Neale Hurston. A lively curmudgeon who’s talked to just about everyone on just about everything (especially grits), Blount’s energetic, unpredictable essays are sure-fire fan-pleasers, and fine discoveries for newcomers.

 

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Topics/Categories:

Food, Language, Massachusetts, New Orleans, Politics, The South

Type of Work:

Anthology

Publishers:

Knopf Publishing Group

Purchase From:

Amazon


Original Publish Date:

2007-05-01

ISBNs:

0307266184

Formats:

Hardcover