Reviews

Magic Hours by Tom Bissell

melanie_reads's review against another edition

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2.0

Coronavirus book review #9 – 2 stars

UGH, Tom Bissell is a load. The Jeff Daniels Escanaba in da Moonlight essay had me going for a bit. The big city nostalgia for small towns that aren’t intended for the small town people they glamorize and the angry mean lady at the end who snickers at you snickering at her snickering at you is on point. BUT ….

I’m with King Wenclas. There absolutely needs to be literature beyond the coastal literary centers. Name drop much, Bissell? Have beef with the fact that Bukowski was an alcoholic and worked at the post office like your average American … what, he wasn’t a striver like you? You've even managed to sour me on McSweeney's.

And the absolute worst, during an interview with Werner Herzog, Bissell points out a minor continuity error in one of Herzog’s movies. You are the poster child for mean-spirted. Then you have the nerve to pretend you’re surprised that annoyed him? And while I’m at it, you said he was wearing biscuit-colored pants. Seriously.

There’s a part of me that hopes you cringe when you read these essays by your younger self. They reek with immaturity. And those hundred-dollar words you throw around like candy? Nobody is impressed.

This is exactly why Middle America hates New Yorkers and Californians. For the record, I lived in LA for 25 years. Maybe I was once like you.

boehmek's review against another edition

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2.0

I enjoyed the first & maybe the 2nd essay, but gave up about 1/2 way through. These aren't essays about creativity. These are essays by a writer, mostly about other writers. Generally some ranting about other writers who rant, and criticism about journalists. I've got better things to read.

bookishlibrarian's review against another edition

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4.0

My favorite essays: "Writing about Writing about Writing" about writing advice books, "Great and Terrible Truths" about David Foster Wallace, "The Theory and Practice of Not Giving a Shit" about the writer Jim Harrison. The gem, for me, was "Escanaba's Magic Hour", in which he returns to his small Michigan hometown to cover its invasion by a film crew making an independent movie there. It's a thoughtful piece on the perception of small towns, from both an insider and outsider perspective.

civreader's review

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4.0

3.5*, maybe. Some of the essays in here are fantastic, while others dragged. A couple of others I was unable to get too much out of, being completely unfamiliar with the subject. At the same time, the piece on Jim Harrison, who I've never read, was superb.

thepassivebookworm's review against another edition

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Lost interest midway through 

annetteb's review against another edition

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3.0

Sharp writing. Interesting thoughts. He's a bit full of himself at moments which is interesting because sometimes he's calling out others for being full of themselves.

bibliocyclist's review against another edition

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3.0

"The joy of victory is cut with a terrifying void."

kimlovesstuff's review against another edition

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3.0

More verbose than I was expecting it to be.

niv7's review against another edition

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4.0

I thoroughly enjoyed all of the essays in this collection (especially, as a FemShep player, Invisible Girl), although at one point I suddenly could not stomach the studiously even-handed, exploratory tone and needed to set the book down for a few days.
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