“Some
novelists seem to make great reporters. Two of the best
journalists of the last 50 years are Norman Mailer and
David Foster Wallace; their literary nonfiction is jaw-droppingly
good, the equal of their fiction. Maybe it's time to
add noted short-story writer George Saunders to this
short list. In The Braindead Megaphone, his
collection of funny essays and long journalism, the affable
author patrols the Mexican border, visits the Buddha
Boy in Nepal, and, in the title essay, ribs America's
loudmouth TV culture: 'Is all our media stupid? Far from
it. But: Is some of our media very stupid? Hoo boy.'
Is Saunders' book on target? Hoo boy. [Grade:] A.” Entertainment Weekly
“Now hear this. Even though MacArthur-Foundation 100-Percent-Certified
Grade-A Genius George Saunders’s first nonfiction collection, The
Braindead Megaphone (Riverhead), is more rooted in the cultural terra
firma of reality than his surreal and absurdly funny fiction, essays such as
his account of chilling in the jungle with “the Buddha Boy” of Nepal,
and the satirical manifesto of P.R.K.A. -- “People Reluctant to Kill for
an Abstraction” -- still straddle the line between ridiculous and deadly
serious, like a Girl Scout with a piece of spaghetti hanging out of her mouth,
holding her troop hostage with an Uzi. Saunders’s bitingly clever and compassionate
essays are a Mark Twain-syle shot in the arm for Americans, an antidote to the
dumbing down virus plaguing our country. Well, we live in hope.” Vanity Fair
“Sparkling.... Sends up a powerful warning flag about what the shouters
and screamers of our contemporary mediascape are doing to American culture.” Cleveland Plain Dealer
“You’ll find the work of George Saunders frequently described as ‘funny,’
but that's like calling a nuclear detonation warm - it’s
true, abundantly so, but it fails to accurately convey the
forces unleashed... The Braindead Megaphone is
a collection of essays, not short stories, but it’s
still a representative and very welcome addition to the Saunders
canon. That’s because essay is given the loosest possible
definition, embracing everything from lighthearted, wholly
fictional verbal badinage to earnest, in-depth field reportage,
and in every case the author’s trademark bricolage
of the fantastical and the familiar is very much in evidence.” San Francisco Chronicle
“Simultaneously hilarious and heartbreaking.” Boston Globe
“Short-story master George Saunders has perfected a form that we're gonna
go ahead and call hysterical empathy: stories in which the regular guy, thrust
into ever more cruel and absurd situations, endures. The essays in The
Braindead Megaphone pack the same punch as his fiction. "Humor
is what happens when we're told the truth quicker and more directly than we're
used to," Saunders writes in a tribute to his forebear Kurt Vonnegut. He
brings that perceptive humor to bear on Iraq-era media, Dubai's architecture,
Borat, and more.” New York Magazine
“Again and again, Saunders demonstrates that wacky , subversive, formally
strange writing is not only contrary to our nation's capitalist spirit, it's
the most natural and effective of responses to it. He makes the all-but-impossible
look effortless. We're lucky to have him.” Jonathan Franzen
“Not since Twain has America produced a satirist this funny.” Zadie Smith
“George Saunders is so funny and inventive he loves words and so wide-eyed
wistful he talks you into loving people.” Sarah Vowell
Brooklyn,
New York
September 16, 2007
12 PM Brooklyn
Book Festival
Brooklyn Borough Hall
Community Room
Los Angeles, CA
September 29, 2007
3 PM
Beverly Hills Public Library
with Miranda July
and Jesse Thorn
Presented by Book
Soup
Get Tickets Here
Pittsburgh, PA
October 1, 2007
8:30 PM
University of Pittsburgh
Frick Fine Arts Auditorium
650 Schenley Drive
Oakland, PA
New York, NY
October 6, 2007
9:30 PM New
Yorker Festival
Angel Orensanz Foundation
172 Norfolk Street with Jonathan Safran Foer
Denver, CO
October 22, 2007
7 PM
Colorado School of Mines
Metals Hall
Green Center
924 16th Street
Golden, CO