Savage gods

Paul Kingsnorth, 1972-

Book - 2019

After moving with his wife and two children to a smallholding in Ireland, Paul Kingsnorth expects to find contentment. It is the goal he has sought -- to nest, to find home -- after years of rootlessness as an environmental activist and author. Instead he finds that his tools as a writer are failing him, calling into question his foundational beliefs about language and setting him at odds with culture itself.

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BIOGRAPHY/Kingsnorth, Paul
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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
[Columbus, Ohio] : Two Dollar Radio [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Paul Kingsnorth, 1972- (author)
Item Description
"Trade Paperback Original"--Page 4 of Cover
Physical Description
126 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9781937512859
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

What does a writer do when words abandon him? Man Booker Prize finalist and internationally acclaimed novelist Kingsnorth (Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist) wrestles with this question and other profundities in his fourth nonfiction title. Attempting to understand the crises that contribute to his current failure to write, Kingsnorth interrogates language, his relationship to it, and the violence that working with it has inflicted on his psyche. The task is almost impossible, though in the throes of anguish the author produces a book filled with words. But the pain it causes him is palpable to the reader. Again and again, Kingsnorth tests different angles from which to comprehend and understand his dilemma, almost always failing to achieve a satisfactory leverage. These repeated attempts are extraordinary and revealing, even when they read as forced experiments, cop-outs, and unnecessary apologies, ultimately creating tensions among the author, his work, and his readers. VERDICT Kingsnorth wrote his brilliant first novel, The Wake, in a language he created. This book provides a startling and instructive account of an uncommonly creative consciousness in a state of profound doubt.--John G. Matthews, Washington State Univ. Libs., Pullman

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Environmentalist and historical novelist Kingsnorth (Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist and Other Essays, 2017, etc.) chronicles his efforts to get back to the land.A few years back, the author "had a plan": to get out of urbanized England, cross a just-big-enough sea to Ireland, and return to nature, schooling the kids at home, growing food, drawing water from a wellthe whole rural ideal as celebrated by Yeats and company. The house he found, not far from the River Shannon, wasn't quite the stuff of romantic idyll, more a concrete bunkerconcrete being the dream of Irish folk "escaping just as soon as they could from the tiny, picturesque, damp, cramped, whitewash-and-thatch cottages" of the postcards. There was no end to the work, but the work was worth it if it meant escaping from The Machinebesides, as Kingsnorth writes, "art that doesn't come from pain is just entertainment." Much pain ensued as the author wrestled with the big questions: If the world is coming to an end, is it worth writing? Why write, anyway? "Am I trying to direct your thoughts here, or mine?" he wonders, agonizing about the meaning of it all, adding later that he feels unmoored in a world that has no culture but plenty of civilization, "and they are not the same thing." A little angst goes a long way, and it doesn't help when Zen koans get mixed into the picture: If you don't exist, are you really writing? In the end, a book that begins with the promise of adventure turns into a kind of journal of pondering and meditation, which is not at all a bad thingthink Alan Watts' Cloud-Hidden. One wishes for a little of the sinew of Roger Deakins' like-minded book Waterlog, but spiritual seekers with a mind to leave the workaday world will find that there's plenty to think about as Kingsnorth works his way through his many questions.One needs to be in the mood for lyrical lamentation, but Kingsnorth's is a voice worth listening to. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.