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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Unique, American Voice, July 27, 2001
By 
D. D. Fulton (Los Angeles, CA. USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Running After Antelope (Hardcover)
Scott Carrier's collection of essays, Running After Antelope alternates sections about travel's to Cambodia, time spent interviewing the mentally ill, and beatnik hitchhiking adventures with brief, intercalary chapters, indexed by year, which describe his passion for animal of the title. Carrier is consumed by the idea of being able to run with these creatures, to track them and perhaps outrun them eventually. On several occasions we meet Scott's brother, a scientist who studies the respiratory systems of mammals. Their relationship is often engaging, as is Scott's relationship to the antelope themselves. Indeed, the author's voice, so easy to read along with after hearing it so many times on NPR, dominates the landscape to such a degree that the reader never really gets a clear view of the vistas, natural and metaphorical, that he attempts to exposit in these brief essay. As individual works, the essays are like existential snapshots of a hell always just below the surface. The best essay in the collection, The Test, describes Carrier's time as a field interviewer for the mentally ill. He meets several, decidedly disturbed individuals - a man who tells Carrier that he can read his mind with the help of a crystal he carries, a woman who was put on medication because she claims sex with angels, and an eighty year old man who responds to every question with a plaintive "I can't remember". Carrier's job plunges further into the heart of darkness when he decides to take the test himself, only to discover, half way through, that the results aren't going to be good. As starling, even heartbreaking, as this essay is, the fact that it is followed later on by a rather lighthearted, Charles Kuraltesque piece about hitching a ride across country with an aspiring art dealer - who incidentally, believes his brother to be a genius of the art world; I wonder if Carrier considered making a stronger parallel with his own brother - and then by two pieces of travel journalism in which Carrier, promisingly enough, rents a motorcycle to transverse the countryside, and then, after getting lost on his way back to the palatial hotel, promptly returns it. The rudiments of Carrier's dark vision of things not quite in their proper place (especially the author himself) do make themselves known from time to time, event these weaker essays. The problem is that the reader's focus is split between the narrator's neurosis (and it is a fascinating one) and the decidedly journalistic intent in many of these essays. The divide never seems to converge at any point, despite the contextual format which leads the reader to believe otherwise. The lack of tonal cohesion between the various pieces, though distracting, should not dissuade a good, long sitting with Carrier's book, however. The precision of his prose style, which sometimes boarders on the baroque, has been honed by years freelancing for public radio. As such, the writing is meant to stimulate the mind's eye. In an early essay, Carrier describes the quite, natural splendor of his Utah:

There are little birds in the trees, and big birds on the rock walls of the canyon - red rock walls in the shadow of the afternoon sun. A dirt road comes around and down and crosses over the stream, and in the pool below road a pale snake slides silent into the water and swims to the other side, holding something rather large in its mouth.

Assonance aside, these sorts of passages, brief and almost haiku-like, crop up throughout the book and provide the necessary calm and elegance to counter Carrier's dark and often morbid musings. It is strange that Scott Carrier, the brooding, almost transient voice so often heard amongst the wacky and the cranky on This American Life, should become a representative belle letterist for this new century. However, the hodgepodge of modes that make up Running After Antelope - memoir, travel essay, nature writing - seems a perfect fit for the era of the translucent computer and gourmet fast-food. Appetites change and morph throughout even a single sitting of reading. To this end, Scott Carrier's short collection of flawed but very often beautiful and haunting essays should provoke even the most distracted of readers.

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Running to Stay Alive", March 12, 2001
By 
rich whitten (Olympia, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Running After Antelope (Hardcover)
Scott Carrier's theme in "Running After Antelope" is a description of his life, of my life, of everyman's life. Intercalated between short essays of his adventures are recurrent descriptions of Scott and his brother's hypothesis that they (humans) can outrun a pronghorn antelope. This metaphor fits a thinking man's quest in life. We all must keep running to really stay alive. This is some sort of by-product of consciousness I suppose. I predict that Scott will never succeed, but he must keep running. Most of us loose sight of what we should run after. This book gently reminds us without the usual prostelitizing. The sparkling essays are crystals without too much said. This is a soothing book, despite the horrors that are depicted. I plan to give it to everyone I know capable of introspection.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Science, human nature, war reporting --- it's all here, May 18, 2004
By 
ensiform (Dallas, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Running After Antelope (Paperback)
A collection of pieces loosely based on the author's obsession, inspired by his biologist brother's studies, with literally running down a deer, as some say primitive men once did. In between the attempts to corraborate stories of Indian tribes who do this and trying to catch pronghorns in Wyoming, Carrier intersperses essays about his divorce, his attempts to produce radio segments on the road, his adventures in hitchhiking, and stories from global hot spots that he did for Esquire. None of these digressions in unwelcome, especially the latter, which are superb stories of the best and worst in human nature, of death and survival. Whether he's interviewing a Cambodian woman whose greatest relief is that she no longer has to spend her day making poison sticks to keep out the militia, or an Indian commander is Kashmir who says the daily carnage is only "friendly fire," Carrier knows how to get the quotes and anecdotes that stick with his readers for a long time.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Addicting, October 5, 2005
This review is from: Running After Antelope (Paperback)
Scott doesn't tell us the story of his life in one time restrained, fact-stacked mess he lets us into his world with lucid storytelling.

From Cambodia to Mexico and into his city of orgin (Salt Lake) Scott uses words to more than paint pictures he transports the reader to the scene and injects them with emotion.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An enjoyable and edifying quick read, December 26, 2004
By 
This review is from: Running After Antelope (Paperback)
Highly recommended.
I read this about a year ago, so don't have the best memory of it, but remember it foundly.
The chapters that directly deal with "Running after antelope" are interesting scientifically in their own right. They broke the idea of a key role for long distance running in human evolution to the public far ahead of the popular press.
The rest of the book was entertaining and filled with good down home american stories as I remember..and inspiring in a semi depressive sort of way.
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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars FH grows up, April 10, 2001
By 
J. T. Winsor (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Running After Antelope (Hardcover)
I have always liked Scott Carrier the most of all of the producers on "This American Life". Something about his voice, writing style, and introspection. I found this book to be a non-fiction Jesus' Son, maybe lacking the manic moments that Denis Johnson pens but the sadness, naiveté, and poetic prose is all there.
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4.0 out of 5 stars S Carrier's "Running", January 24, 2010
This review is from: Running After Antelope (Paperback)
Item arrived in perfect condition in a timely manner.
The book itself is pretty interesting and funny, and it has that special spark that non-fiction has because this stuff really happened to somebody.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Good read, May 18, 2009
By 
Scott McArthur (San Antonio, TX United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Running After Antelope (Paperback)
After hearing all of Scott Carriers stories on This American life, I bought this book with high hopes. While I found it to be very interesting, it is very short. I was looking for more info on the stories from the radio, but instead I got the same stories, nearly word for word. There were some other stories in there though from other articles in Esquire and other print media that helped to flesh it out.

Over all, yep, it was good. I would love to see another book by Scott Carrier though.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Book, June 26, 2008
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This review is from: Running After Antelope (Paperback)
Scott Carrier has the ability to bring the difficult, heartfelt pain of going through transition to words with humor, selflessness and honesty. His very humble manner is charming and yet also you realize how much you want to reach out and help, even though his writing style isn't a call for help. I listened to him on NPR and I laughed as he described living in mormon Utah and discussed the most personal topic of all, his life. He is going through the same trials and tribulations we all do, his is a personal painful road which I hope most won't have to encounter. But I loved his work and only wish he would write more.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Somber yet darkly funny commentary, November 22, 2005
This review is from: Running After Antelope (Paperback)
This book is a loosely woven collection of essays from Scott Carrier, some of which were read on various NPR programs, and others of which appeared in Esquire. Running throughout the essays are the author's attempts to outrun pronghorn (prodded by his brother's research into the evolution of breathing). But along the way, we hear about Carrier's other adventures in the world: reporting from places where most would fear to tread (the jungles of Mexico, Kashmir, Cambodia), trying to find the truth; hitchhiking across the country to collect an advance on a book; living in a dumpy house near the University of Utah with some way-out neighbors; and many more. In each, he examines the plight of the people whose paths cross his. His writing is very evocative and immediate, sad and funny. I sped through this little collection and might just look for something else by Carrier.
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Running After Antelope
Running After Antelope by Scott Carrier (Paperback - Mar. 2002)
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