Confessions of a Guilty Freelancer

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Product Details
Price
$29.00  $26.97
Publisher
Indiana University Press
Publish Date
Pages
384
Dimensions
5.4 X 7.9 X 0.9 inches | 0.95 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780253001818

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About the Author

William O'Rourke, a former columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times, is author of The Meekness of Isaac, Idle Hands, Criminal Tendencies, and Notts, and five works of nonfiction. He is editor of On the Job: Fiction about Work by Contemporary American Writers and (with John Matthias) of the collection Notre Dame Review: The First Ten Years.

Reviews

"I can think of no other contemporary writer more suited to the task of chronicling his literary generation. A voracious reader, O'Rourke has always had his finger on the pulse of the contemporary American literary scene."--Corinne Demas, author of The Writing Circle

"I don't know any writer who can be as funny and as gloomy at the same time as William O'Rourke. Perhaps that's why he has a fresh take on anything he looks at, and in his grumpy way he is interested in almost everything, from agnostics teaching at Catholic universities to the Zeitgeist of prime-time television. He always hoped to apply for the job of public intellectual, he tells us, but then the position disappeared and a hundred thousand bloggers took its place. O'Rourke makes--he has always made--decency and common sense seem the most startling ingenuity--which, come to think of it, they are. As skeptical as he is watchful, as ardently hopeful as he is, most of the time, horrified; with sparkling wit that never takes a vacation, he is our unpaid public intellectual number one."--Jaimy Gordon, author of Lord of Misrule, winner of the 2010 National Book Award for Fiction

"This book is a brilliant overview of American history from the 1960s to the post 9/11 era. William O'Rourke is both a novelist and a political commentator--he wrote weekly columns for the Chicago Sun-Times--and a forceful writer of nonfiction."--Maura Stanton, author of Immortal Sofa: Poems by Maura Stanton

"O'Rourke's 'personal' writing doesn't simply mean how the subject relates to him; his writing is literary, without a doubt, but his style is conversational, rhythmic and leavened by a dry sense of humor that engage the reader on an intimate level."--South Bend Tribune

"O'Rourke is that rarest of increasingly rare birds, a writer's writer. . . . O'Rourke brings an artist's critical thinking to his political writing, providing him angles of attack on players from both parties that help reframe the issues in ways not available through the most mainstream press outlets."--NUVO

"[T]hose who enjoy a good romp through some of our country's most pivotal times in the company of an astute observer who is unafraid to offer a penetrating, and sometimes scathing, critique of the state of the nation, will find themselves well matched."--ForeWord Reviews

"O'Rourke's descriptions of the writing life have the ring of absolute truth."--Review of Contemporary Fiction