The Abominable Mr. Seabrook

by Joe Ollmann

Paperback, 2017

Status

Available

Call number

070.92

Collection

Publication

Drawn and Quarterly (2017), 316 pages

Description

"In the early twentieth century, travel writing represented the desire for the expanding bourgeoisie to experience the exotic cultures of the world past their immediate surroundings. Journalist William Buehler Seabrook was emblematic of this trend--participating in voodoo ceremonies, riding camels cross the Sahara desert, communing with cannibals and most notably, popularizing the term 'zombie' in the West. A string of his bestselling books show an engaged, sympathetic gentleman hoping to share these strange, hidden delights with the rest of the world. He was willing to go deeper than any outsider had before. But, of course, there was a dark side. Seabrook was a barely functioning alcoholic who was deeply obsessed with bondage and the so-called mystical properties of pain and degradation. His life was a series of traveling highs and drunken lows; climbing on and falling off the wagon again and again. What led the popular and vivid writer to such a sad state? Cartoonist Joe Ollmann spent seven years researching Seabrook's life, interviewing surviving family and accessing long neglected archives, in order to piece together the peripatetic life of a forgotten American writer. Often weaving in Seabrook's own words and those of his biographers, Ollmann posits Seabrook the believer versus Seabrook the exploiter, and leaves the reader to consider where one ends and the other begins."--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member villemezbrown
Well, reading nearly three hundred pages of a drunken, misogynistic jackass proved to be a real slog. At one point I was holding out hope that this was a hoax biography, that this was all just made up, but no the jerk really existed. This book seems like one part of a concerted effort to revive
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interest in Seabrook and his writing, but it utterly fails for me and leaves me kind of hoping it fails for everyone else too. Some people are better left forgotten.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

316 p.; 4.06 inches

ISBN

1770462678 / 9781770462670
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