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Cold New World: Growing Up in a Harder Country (Modern Library Paperbacks)

Modern Library

$24.76 - $30.95
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UPC:
9780375753824
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
1999-06-07
Release Date:
1999-06-07
Author:
William Finnegan
Language:
english
Edition:
New edition
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From the Pulitzer Prizewinning author ofBarbarian Days,this narrative nonfiction classic documents the rising inequality and cultural alienation that presaged the crises of today.

A status report onthe American Dream [that] gets its power [from] the unpredictable, rich specifics of peoples lives.Time

[William]Finnegans real achievement is to attach identities tothesteady stream of faceless statistics that tell us Americas social problems are more serious than we want to believe.The Washington Post

A fifteen-year-old drug dealer in blighted New Haven, Connecticut; a sleepy Texas town transformed by crack; Mexican American teenagers in Washington State, unable to relate to their immigrant parents and trying to find an identity in gangs; jobless young white supremacists in a downwardly mobile L.A. suburb. William Finnegan spent years embedded with families in four communities across the country to become an intimate observer of the lives he reveals in Cold New World.What emerges from these beautifully rendered portraits is a prescient and compassionate bookthat never loses sight of its subjects humanity.

ANEW YORK TIMESNOTABLE BOOK ALOS ANGELES TIMESBEST NONFICTION SELECTION

Praise forCold New World

Unlike most journalists who drop in for a quick interview and fly back out again, Finnegan spent many weeks with families in each community over a period of several years, enough time to distinguish between the kind of short-term problems that can beset anyone and the longer-term systemic poverty and social disintegration that can pound an entire generation into a groove of despair.Los Angeles Times Book Review

The most remarkable of William Finnegans many literary gifts is his compassion. Not the fact of it, which we have a right to expect from any personal reporting about the oppressed, but its coolness, its clarity, its ductile strength. . . . Finnegan writes like a dream. His prose is unfailingly lucid, graceful, and specific, his characterization effortless, and the pull of his narrative pure seduction.The Village Voice

Four astonishingly intimate and evocative portraits. . . . All of these stories are vividly, honestly and compassionately told. . . . WhileCold New Worldmay make us look in new ways at our young people, perhaps its real goal is to make us look at ourselves.The Philadelphia Inquirer