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'Illuminating and frequently touching ... Bageant just wants us to think. To remember. To lift the veil of collective amnesia. To see.'
--Stephen Webb "Insights "'[Rainbow Pie is] more an essay on political economy, lavishly illustrated with anecdotes from five generations of his own family, than a life story.'
--Sunday Tasmanian'Most Australians look upon the US with wide-eyed bewilderment. Why do Americans think public healthcare will lead to death panels? How did they ever believe Saddam Hussein was involved in the attack on the World Trade Centre? What craziness leads so many to believe Barack Obama is a Kenyan-born Muslim? Why, over and over again, do they appear to fight against their own best interests? If you want answers to these questions then this dissection of the US's "white underclass" is superbly insightful.'
--Bruce Elder "Sydney Morning Herald 'Pick of the Week' "'For all of its bitterness, the book is lifted by Bageant's unique and personable voice. Even in the darkest chapters, it retains a folksy charm and an admirably black wit. It's rare for such a downer of a book to make the reader grin so often.'
--Courier Mail'Joe Bageant has a wonderful ability to embed hard social, political and economic facts into the warp and weft of stories of homespun characters, close to the earth they plow that speaks thru them.
It's not true that a good book is one you "can't put it down." I put down Rainbow Pie several times -- sometimes even on a page -- to savor the language and admire the skyline, and dig deep into the loam of characters, marvel at the panoply of facts marshalled along the way.
Rainbow Pie is touching in the way that Thoreau touches us, in its ideas about place and "abidance," natural and superficial worlds.'
--Gary Corseri "Literary scholar, arts critic Salon.com, Counterpunch.com "'An amazing read. What Harper Lee had to hide behind fiction to write, Joe Bageant has done straight-up, with all the bones showing. This is a majestic work.'
--Bob Kincaid, Head-On Radio Network'Joe Bageant doesn't mince his words in this angry requiem for the dignity of the white US working classes. Subtitled A Memoir Of Redneck America, Rainbow Pie is a terse, provocative book ... As the midterm elections approach and a solid proportion of the US 'middle class' seems to be gearing up to vote for the sort of lurid right-wingers that baffle even conservative Europeans, Bageant offers some plausible suggestions as to why things have come to this.'
--Andrzej Lukowski "Metro.co.uk "'Equal parts social commentary and evocative memoir, this book exposes the vast and growing inequity between the economic mismanagers and the working poor in the US ... Don't presume this is in any way dour soapboxery: Bageant is an effortless humourist. And his reminiscences lead to moments of sheer literary pleasure.' FOUR STARS
--Melissa Cranenburgh "Big Issue "'Bageant is a US social commentator with a unique angle -- he was born a redneck, in rural America. Now he is a middle-class intellectual and an acerbic commentator on his beloved land. He became famous with Deer Hunting With Jesus, an analysis of poor, white, conservative Americans that was written with Steinbeck-like compassion and observation. He saw his subjects as victims of rabid capitalism and evangelical religion. Rainbow Pie continues in this vein, a memoir of his family ... A powerful book.'
--Sunday Age'Taken together, Bageant's two books provide salutary, hilarious and at times harrowing reading, with more than a few lessons of caution for Australia. Compassionate and brilliantly written.'
--Adelaide ReviewRainbow Pie is a coming-of-age memoir wrapped around a discussion of America’s most taboo subject — social class. Set between 1950 and 1963, Joe Bageant uses Maw, Pap, Ony Mae, and other members of his rambunctious Scots–Irish family to chronicle the often-heartbreaking post-war journey of 22 million rural Americans into the cities, where they became the foundation of a permanent white underclass.
Combining recollection, stories, accounts, remembrance, and analysis, the book offers an intimate look at what Americans lost in the massive and orchestrated post-war social and economic shift from an agricultural to an urban consumer society. Along the way, he also provides insights into how ‘the second and third generation of displaced agrarians’, as Gore Vidal described them, now fuel the discontent of America’s politically conservative, God-fearing, Obama-hating ‘red-staters’.
These are the gun-owning, uninsured, underemployed white tribes inhabiting America’s urban and suburban heartland: the ones who never got a slice of the pie during the good times, and the ones hit hardest by America’s bad times, and who hit back during election years. Their ‘tough work and tougher luck’ story stretches over generations, and Bageant tells it here with poignancy, indignation, and tinder-dry wit.
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Descripción Softcover. Condición: New. Rainbow Pie is a coming-of-age memoir wrapped around a discussion of Americas most taboo subject - social class. Set between 1950 and 1963, Joe Bageant uses Maw, Pap, Ony Mae, and other members of his rambunctious Scots-Irish family to chronicle the often-heartbreaking post-war journey of 22 million rural Americans into the cities, where they became the foundation of a permanent white underclass.Combining recollection, stories, accounts, remembrance, and analysis, the book offers an intimate look at what Americans lost in the massive and orchestrated post-war social and economic shift from an agricultural to an urban consumer society. Along the way, he also provides insights into how the second and third generation of displaced agrarians, as Gore Vidal described them, now fuel the discontent of Americas politically conservative, God-fearing, Obama-hating red-staters.These are the gun-owning, uninsured, underemployed white tribes inhabiting Americas urban and suburban heartland: the ones who never got a slice of the pie during the good times, and the ones hit hardest by Americas bad times, and who hit back during election years. Their tough work and tougher luck story stretches over generations, and Bageant tells it here with poignancy, indignation, and tinder-dry wit. Nº de ref. del artículo: DADAX192164091X
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