2018 NEXT GENERATION INDIE BOOK AWARDS
WINNER: MEMOIR (OVERCOMING ADVERSITY/TRAGEDY) AND FINALIST: REGIONAL
NON-FICTION
“JAMES NOLAN LOOKS BACK UNSPARINGLY ON A TIME FEW WRITERS HAVE FACED
WITH SUCH CLARITY AND COMPASSION. THERE’S SUSPENSE AND BEAUTY ON
EVERY PAGE. . . .” —ANDREI CODRESCU
_Flight Risk _takes off as a page-turning narrative with deep roots
and a wide wingspan. James Nolan, a fifth-generation New Orleans
native, offers up an intimate portrait both of his insular hometown
and his generation's counterculture. Flight runs as a theme throughout
the book, which begins with Nolan’s escape from the gothic mental
hospital to which his parents committed the teenaged poet during the
tumult of 1968. This breakout is followed by the self-styled
revolutionary’s hair-raising flight from a Guatemalan jail, and
years later, by the author’s bolt from China, where he ditched his
teaching position and collectivist ideals. These Houdini-like feats
foreshadow a more recent one, how he dodged biblical floods in a
stolen school bus three days after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans.
Nolan traces these flight patterns to those of his French ancestors
who fled to New Orleans in the mid-nineteenth century, established a
tobacco business in the French Quarter, and kept the old country alive
in their Creole demimonde. The writer describes the eccentric Seventh
Ward menagerie of the extended family in which he grew up, his early
flirtation with extremist politics, and a strong bond with his
freewheeling grandfather, a gentleman from the Gilded Age. Nolan’s
quest for his own freedom takes him to the flower-powered,
gender-bending San Francisco of the sixties and seventies, as well as
to an expatriate life in Spain during the heady years of that
nation’s transition to democracy. Like the prodigal son, he
eventually returns home to live in the French Quarter, around the
corner from where his grandmother grew up, only to struggle through
the aftermath of Katrina and the city’s resurrection.
Many of these stories are entwined with the commentaries of a wry
flâneur, addressing such subjects as the nuances of race in New
Orleans, the Disneyfication of the French Quarter, the numbing anomie
of digital technology and globalization, the challenges of caring for
aging parents, Creole funeral traditions, how to make a soul-searing
gumbo, and what it really means to belong.
Les mer
Memoirs of a New Orleans Bad Boy
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781496811288
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
University Press of Mississippi
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter