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Loading... Chuck Klosterman IV: A Decade of Curious People and Dangerous Ideasby Chuck Klosterman
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Klosterman is kinda entertaining, but he is also a one trick pony. That trick is condensing the subject (band, person, whatever) into one or at maximum two metaphors and/or similes. Also: funny footnotes, ha ha. Klosterman has a style that's both irreverent and sympathetic. He's ferociously iconoclastic and at times deconstructionist in his thinking... and yet, like Louis Theroux or Jon Ronson, you never feel he's taking the piss. He's got this clever self-deprecating thing going on too, so he tries to come across as smarter than his subjects... even when he's interviewing Britney Spears, who is "either the least self-aware person (he's) ever met, or she's way, way savvier than (he'll) ever be". Read the full review at my blog. a cool book. sort of a collection of different articles Klosterman had appeared in and written since he got famous (circa 2004-2005) a very special interview is his Val Kilmer one where Kilmer admits to knowing more what it's like to be Jim Morrison than Jim Morrison did after playing him in a film. that's how intense his method acting is. Klosterman is great at bringing out strange words from people. and his style is beautiful in a modern sort of way. look out for this if you're a music journalist fan. The interviews are great, the cultural stuff less successful, but always very readable and sometimes very funny. no reviews | add a review
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Chuck Klosterman IV: A Decade of Curious People and Dangerous Ideas |
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CHUCK KLOSTERMAN IV
CONSISTS OF THREE PARTS:
THINGS THAT ARE TRUE
Profiles and trend stories: Britney Spears, Radiohead, Billy Joel, Metallica, Val Kilmer, Bono, Wilco, the White Stripes, Steve Nash, Morrissey, Robert Plant -- all with new introductions and footnotes.
THINGS THAT MIGHT BE TRUE
Opinions and theories on everything from monogamy to pirates to robots to super people to guilt, and (of course) Advancement -- all with new hypothetical questions and footnotes.
SOMETHING THAT ISN'T TRUE AT ALL
This is old fiction. There's a new introduction, but no footnotes. Well, there's a footnote in the introduction, but none in the story.
(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 17:20:37 -0500)
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This book largely a collection of previously published articles about pop-culture icons. It's more than mere anthology, though—Klosterman wrote introductions and footnotes to the articles that are often as illuminating as the article itself. As if this wasn't enough, he ended this volume with a short quasi-autobiographical novella to round out the collection. Oddly enough, it all seems to flow together.
His perspective can grow wearisome, but (like Douglas Coupland) after placing the book down for a brief sabbatical you'll find yourself craving more.
Klosterman's a commentator on the human condition. A condition he perceives more accurately than most. (