Crackers

Title Details

Pages: 324

Trim size: 5.500in x 8.250in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 09/01/1998

ISBN: 9-780-8203-2060-1

List Price: $27.95

Related Subjects

HUMOR / Form / Essays

Crackers

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  • Description
  • Reviews

Have you ever asked yourself, Am I southern? If not geographically, then deep down, at heart? Or, if I am not southern myself, do I know people who are southern, whom I misunderstand? Is there some authority I should consult?

Crackers. Without this book, you will just flail around in the shallows of Southernity, with nothing solid to hold onto. Roy Blount Jr. puts you in touch with possums, heterosexist dancing, people named Junior, a two-headed four-armed three-legged gospel-singing man, your feelings about the Carter administration. These specifics take you out into the depths.

As a character in Crackers puts it, "I don't read books about the South, but I read southern books. Hoooo, people stealing one another's wooden legs, setting fires, making tarbabies out of one another. . . ."

Crackers is a southern book.

The best of Blount—and Blount at his best.

—Tom Wolfe

Page for page, Roy Blount is as funny as anyone I've read in a long time.

—Norman Mailer

Roy Blount, Jr., establishes himself as a major humorist.

—William F. Buckley Jr.

The funniest book I've read in a decade.

—Harry Crews

[Crackers] serves as a springboard for all manner of wild, outrageous, incisive, iconoclastic observations about the South in particular and the American Reality in general.

Library Journal

This book contains pop zest and folk wisdom . . . deep-dish country humor and acute sensibility. . . . Like Mark Twain, [Blount] pits the sagacity and saltiness of the cracker barrel against the smooth, evasive rhetoric of the soapbox.

New Republic

About the Author/Editor

ROY BLOUNT JR.'s works include the memoir Be Sweet: A Conditional Love Story, the novel First Hubby, the screenplay for Larger than Life, the edited anthology Roy Blount's Book of Southern Humor, and such collections as Now, Where Were We? and Not Exactly What I Had in Mind. He is a frequent guest on Garrison Keillor's "A Prairie Home Companion" and a columnist for the Oxford American. He lives in New York City and western Massachusetts.