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US Guys: The True and Twisted Mind of the American Man
 
 
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US Guys: The True and Twisted Mind of the American Man [Hardcover]

Charlie LeDuff (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 1, 2007
Heir to Jack Kerouac and Hunter S. Thompson, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Charlie LeDuff scours the country, tossing back whiskey with the seedy, the dreamy, and the strange in search of the soul of the American male.

No one knows life's underbelly better than New York Times reporter Charlie LeDuff. Christened the "bibulous scribe of the working class" by his peers, he's made a career chronicling, with dead-on feel for character and idiom, the gritty lives of the drifters, the forgotten, and the strange-people washed up and washed out on alcohol, broken dreams, lifetimes of hard living. Willing to follow his subjects where no respectable white-collared man would dare go, he is clearly-and admittedly-a writer "not for people who have doormen, but for doormen." And while his wholly original coverage of this beat has brought him acclaim as a journalist, it has also made him something of a working-class hero.

Who better, then, to examine what it means to be a man in modern-day America? US Guys: The True and Twisted Mind of the American Man is LeDuff's equally intoxicated and intoxicating journey across the country in search of the heart and soul of today's American male. With characteristic audacity, compassion, and humor, he takes part in a Bacchanalian Burning Man festival in Nevada, clad in a Mohawk and little else; trains with the sadhearted Russian clown of a traveling circus; leads a cavalry charge down the Little Bighorn River with war reenactors; joins a C-level professional football team; infiltrates a West Oakland bike gang that holds fight parties; travels with Appalachian snake handlers and tent revivalists; and covers a cowboy love story at a gay rodeo ("Not like the movie. Life is never like the movies. Life is messy and complicated and self-loathing and funny"). At each juncture LeDuff faithfully records their religion and sins and racism, their freaks and misfits, their search for the American dream, and the sweetness they find in living it out, if only for a moment.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Whether fighting the biggest guy at an Oakland biker club, talking race with a semipro Texas football team or riding shotgun with Detroit homicide, LeDuff's gonzo exploits in this book are nothing short of inspired. The New York Times reporter is a big-game hunter, with plenty of ability to sniff out, ensnare and lovingly stuff and mount his subjects. Less an analytic discourse than an "American travelogue," the book searches out "the angry forgotten middling America"—rendering a complex array of American wildlife, from gay rodeo star wannabes to Little Big Horn re-enactors. Though LeDuff's writing often comes off as aggressive and unfiltered, there are many moments when it feels self-consciously stylized, eclipsing an otherwise keen eye for detail. Authenticity surfaces in astute observations ("self-expression is dangerous when too much expression is mixed with too little sense of self"). But LeDuff's quest for edginess sometimes overwhelms his insights, through overuse of words like "cheap" ("cheap booze," "cheap-looking girl," "cheap chromium tanning salons"). His pronouncements on American life (e.g., "meaning is invented in America through new sink faucets and car waxes and aluminum siding in pastel colors") can also miss the mark. Like the hard-luck stories he chronicles, the book is angry, touching, entertaining and flawed—a prologue, one hopes, to greater things down the road. (Feb. 5)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

...LeDuff's a fearless, clear-eyed companion into parts of America that rarely see print. When he's on, his sentences are unbeatable. A- -- Entertainment Weekly, February 2, 2007

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The (February 1, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1594201064
  • ISBN-13: 978-1594201066
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,181,427 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Grim Tone of Male Misfits, February 6, 2007
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This review is from: US Guys: The True and Twisted Mind of the American Man (Hardcover)
Each chapter of this book presents a well-detailed, separate profile of a down-and-out male misfit who, struggling, with his sense of belonging or lack thereof, resorts to booze, other addictions, long-winded story-telling, eccentric indulgences, or some extreme macho pursuit or other. LeDuff is a capable writer and an excellent stylist, but his thesis, that the diverse range of contradictory male impulses defy conventional masculine images, is a bit broad and heavy-handed. With a tone that is grim, earnest and too often rich in sanctimony, LeDuff seems to be lecturing us, PBS style, on the "struggles and issues" of working class men. LeDuff is intent on championing his populist cause, so much so that early in the book he criticizes (without naming him) Thomas Friedman for dismissing the working class by arguing that Americans have lost their competitive edge. He'll be damned if he'll let Friedman take such a cheap pot shot and he's going to give sympathetic portraits of gritty working class men and defend them from Friedman's screed. The result is an overly serious, humorless, and in the end somewhat politically boxed-in book. To be fair, I was expecting some more humor, more irony, more playfulness. But I suppose the author felt it necessary to keep everything somber and deadly serious. Too bad because LeDuff is strong talent, he has experienced much around the world, traveling to Iraq for example, and he surely has a lot to say.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars SOME of "US Guys", August 19, 2007
This review is from: US Guys: The True and Twisted Mind of the American Man (Hardcover)
I'm sure if LeDuff felt that some white collar writer were lumping all the men of his generation into some group, he'd rant and rave against such stereotyping. But he's eager to do the same, throwing out sweeping generalizations about the men of his generation (once called "X" now called nothing in particular, he asserts). To draw on his experiences at Nevada's Burning Man festival and say his generation "meanders through life without purpose, charting with a broken compass" sounds nice and deep, but in all honesty, are the people who trek into the Nevada desert (or join the gay rodeo circuit, fight-club motorcycle clubs, or bottom-rung football teams) truly the standard-bearers of an entire generation?
Sure, LeDuff, go ahead and write about the down-and-outers, but don't lump everyone else born in the same couple of decades into your groups of directionless losers. Your stories are an interesting look at a small group of disaffected American men, not all of us, so jump down off your high horse of judgement and recognize the limits of your choice of experiences.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars DISAPPOINTING!, February 25, 2009
Wow, I don't know who this author dislikes more, women (see the Preface for just ONE example) or other guys! I thought it was going to be interviews with a good cross-section of American males from a lot of different walks of life; but with the exception of the chapter on the Detroit cop, the book is a collection of interviews with strange and mostly embittered men going nowhere done by an author who seems pretty bitter himself.
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