The Best American Essays 2011 (Best American Series)

by Edwidge Danticat

Other authorsRobert Atwan (Editor)
Paperback, 2011

Status

Available

Call number

814.008

Publication

Mariner Books (2011), Edition: 1, Paperback, 272 pages

Description

The Best American Series® First, Best, and Best-Selling The Best American series is the premier annual showcase for the country's finest short fiction and nonfiction. Each volume's series editor selects notable works from hundreds of magazines, journals, and websites . A special guest editor, a leading writer in the field, then chooses the best twenty or so pieces to publish. This unique system has made the Best American series the most respected--and most popular--of its kind. The Best American Essays 2011 includes Hilton Als, Katy Butler, Toi Derricotte, Christopher Hitchens, Pico Iyer, Charlie LeDuff, Chang-Rae Lee, Lia Purpura, Zadie Smith, Reshma Memon Yaqub, and others

User reviews

LibraryThing member mahallett
most essays were short and good. a few were dreadful
LibraryThing member mel.davidoff
What a superb collection of essays. While I found the subject matter almost universally interesting, I was even more amazed by the different creative forms the essays took. Very few were merely straightforward musings on a subject, many had incredibly creative constructions, helping to interweave
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seemingly unrelated topics.
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LibraryThing member bragan
I've really enjoyed some of the many yearly "Best American" collections, especially the "Best American Science and Nature Writing", so when I came across this 2011 collection of essays at a library sale a while back, I figured I'd give it a go, too. I have to say, my feelings about this collection
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are a little more mixed than they usually are about the science and nature ones. The best of the essays here are excellent. (Bridget Potter's "Lucky Girl," about her experience attempting to obtain an abortion in 1962, particularly sticks in my mind.) The rest mostly range from okay to very good, with only one that I'd unhesitatingly call bad. (That would be Bernadette Esposito's "A-LOC," which was just incoherent, and filled with ridiculous New Age claptrap to boot.) And it features a gratifyingly diverse collection of many different kinds of voices.

But even many of the very well-written essays, taken one after another, started to feel a little unsatisfying to me. There is, perhaps, a limit to my appetite for random snippets of navel-gazing from strangers, and there is quite a bit of that here. Enough of it, in fact, that one of the pieces included -- Christy Vannoy's "A Personal Essay by a Personal Essay" -- itself acknowledges and satirizes both the self-indulgence of the whole exercise and the tendency of essayists to focus squarely on their personal suffering. Which, hoo boy, do the essays here do. It really is a cavalcade of depressing events: cancer, abuse, hospitalization, dementia, violence, and death. So it's sometimes an affecting or a thought-provoking read, but never a happy one. Mind you, the essays that I think work the very best are the ones that look outward as they look inward, ones that position the writers' negative experiences in some kind of larger context, even if only implicitly. And the essays that do that most effectively probably make the entire collection worthwhile.
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LibraryThing member CarrieWuj
Wide selection of topics and authors. "Grieving" details the process of contesting denial for tenure and it is the official eponymous term for that process. "A-LOC" intersperses the author's fear of flying with her participation in a simulated crash and emergency team response for the purpose of
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practice for those involved. "Chapels" is a beautiful reflection by Pico Iyer on our need for quiet and remove from the world to fully be. "Patient" is a description of a college student's accident -- being run over by a bus -- and the ensuing rehabilitation. "Pearl Upward" is almost a prose poem about one young girl's experience of the Great Migration from the Delta to Chicago. Worthwhile reading all.
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Language

Original publication date

2011

Physical description

272 p.; 8.2 inches

ISBN

0547479778 / 9780547479774
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