Chuck Klosterman X: A Highly Specific, Defiantly Incomplete History of the Early 21st Century
B**R
This is only for the ones who have EVOLVED as a reader
A Highly Specific Defiantly Incomplete History of the 21st century by Chuck Klosterman: A high time read for the highly picky choosy reader-- I read this book last year and today while going through my shelf I attuned to write about this well researched, brain whoop of a book! Bye bye boredom, bring it on #coronarender #coronascare2020 O helloo #quarantine / #Lockdown / #whatever. .Short review: Difficult. Distinct. Groovy. Nothing which can hold you down but your brain is in for a prozac attack. Entertaining if you like to read American Psyche. Another one of a longish read. . .A collective collapse of the history surrounding inflating figures through history who once graced the author in some way or the other. There are excerpts, interviews, proses which border on funny to hysterical (sic Historical). Every page is a blast of information. So clear your head, schedule and dive into this. For some, there might be too much going on. Like really. So, discretion is advised and if you still are reading Enid Blyton and Dan Browns, which you think cracks your skull up because it's the most difficult read for you, then please don't read this. This is only for the ones who have EVOLVED as a reader. . .VERDICT: Borrow (so that you can return if the first few pages make your head hobble) . .FOR: The information muncher, the fans of historics. Music lovers. Fans of journalism. Fans of Klosterman. The hungry vicious reader. The unafraid and unapologetic.
A**R
It'll make you laugh, it'll make you think and it'll make you want to read it again
Sophisticated insight and observations from one of our generations greatest social commentators. If you can't get down with Chuck you have bigger issues to worry about.
A**.
As described
Received as described/expected. Packaged well and no damage.
A**R
The Best of CK
A highly entertaining collection of Chuck's greatest hits from the 2000s. Recommended.
M**T
GOOD BOOK
GREAT BOOK
A**R
Another great one from Chuck Klosterman
If you devoured a lot of pop culture over the last decade, you might wonder what Chuck Klosterman's latest volume, Chuck Klosterman X: A Highly Specific, Defiantly Incomplete History of the Early 21st Century, has to offer. My answer to this: perspective. In this collection of 38 essays culled from his work in publications like Esquire and Grantland, Klosterman analyzes various facets of pop culture ranging from zombies to Miley Cyrus, from Mountain Dew to Lou Reed. He explains, "Consumed in aggregate, this omnibus equates to a short book about music, a short book about sports, and a short book about everything else that could possibly exist." Disconnected as these subjects may seem, they are all filtered through Klosterman's unique voice. He's the anti-critic. He's the guy who goes to both Creed and Nickelback concerts on the same night just to find out why the bands are hated so much.One of the best essays, titled "Three Man Weave," traces the bizarre story of a "...pair of low-profile junior college basketball teams [who] played a forgotten game on a neutral floor in southeast North Dakota" in 1988. Due to a series of random events, the unfavored team won with only 3 players on the floor. The topic sounds boring--so boring, in fact, that many of the subjects interviewed had forgotten details of the event. But then the same thing happens to the exact same teams in 2016! That is one of Klosterman's gifts as a writer: turning a boring tale into something eyebrow-raising. Perspective.His other gift: writing 10,000-word essays about KISS and making you like it.Aside from a few articles on nostalgia and Charlie Brown, the majority of the book is filled with Klosterman's musings on sports or music. His interviews with Jimmy Page, Noel Gallagher, Stephen Malkmus, and Eddie Van Halen are just as excellent as his pieces on Tim Tebow, Kobe Bryant, and Tom Brady.He takes a turn into "grumpy aging cultural writer" territory in his reflection on Harry Potter as a cultural phenomenon:"...I find it astounding that the unifying cultural currency for modern teenagers is five-hundred-page literary works about a wizard...Because I don't understand Harry Potter, am I doomed to misunderstand everything else?"My response to Klosterman: Probably not. Your world view has been shaped by Walter White, Jonathan Franzen, and a love of hair metal, and that is no more or less significant than books about wizards. But if I ever meet you in a bar, I'll get you drunk and we'll figure out your house (I'm guessing Hufflepuff).What does one do after reading the entirety of a Chuck Klosterman book in one sitting? (Ok, two sittings). Somehow, starting a Noel Gallagher cover band seems equally as appealing as joining a fantasy sports league. I can't help but think this is what Klosterman wants: for the voyeurs of pop culture to realize what they are missing by observing but not truly living it; and for those swimming in the thick of it to see pop culture as the voyeurs do.I recommend Chuck Klosterman X: A Highly Specific, Defiantly Incomplete History of the Early 21st Century to fans of music, sports, and everything else that could possibly exist. Most importantly, if you did not know that in 2006, Danger Mouse released an illegal Beatles/Jay-Z mashup called The Grey Album (and it's excellent), then you should read this book strictly for educational purposes.
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