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Loading... Off to the Side: A Memoirby Jim Harrison
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. An excellent memoir---bears rereading soon just for the literature references. The title is where he says a writer should be, not in the limelight. Lucid and well written. That should be on Harisons grave stone. But also interesting and thought provoking. Someone I would like to meet some day. I didn't realize he started writing fiction so late in his life. a tour de force. harrison's essays are both generous and terse and somehow still larger than life. his descriptions of food are so incredible that they could drive me to a similar case of gout. no reviews | add a review
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The solace Harrison finds in the natural world is most compelling, and it could be said he, too, shares Frost's "lover's quarrel with the world." After losing an eye at an early age and sinking into melancholy, Harrison's father advised that "curiosity will get you through hard times when nothing else will. Your curiosity had to be strong enough to lift you out of your self-sunken mudbath, the violent mixture of hormones, injuries, melancholy, and dreams of a future you not only couldn't touch but could scarcely see." These words were not lost on Harrison. With "no expertise outside of [his] own imagination" Harrison plays to his strengths in Off to the Side by setting down the events, experiences, thoughts, and feelings that have shaped his quite literate, truly American life. --Michael Ferch
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:03 -0400)
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