Tom Zoellner is the author and co–author of eight previous nonfiction books, the politics editor of The Los Angeles Review of Books, an associate professor of English at Chapman University and a visiting professor of English at Dartmouth College. His writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Harper's, Men's Health, the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and many other places. He is the recipient of fellowships and residencies from The Lannan Foundation, the Corporation of Yaddo and the Mid–Atlantic Arts Foundation.
"A sneakily ambitious book whose 13 'dispatches' present a sweeping
view of the American land and its inhabitants―how each has shaped,
and deformed, the other . . . Zoellner is a beautiful writer, a
superb reporter and a deep thinker." —Jody Rosen, The New York
Times Book Review
"A fascinating investigation into American places and themes;
metaphors for our country . . . Zoellner sums up America as 'a
country of destruction and reinvention where the scythe sits on the
table next to the blueprint . . . America is a culture of whereness
. . . this road of constant change is our blotchy and beautiful
inheritance.' The National Road is an enthralling journey that
proves his point." —Martha Anne Toll, NPR
"The question of who we are as a people eludes a definitive answer,
but his collection of essays offers a penetrating look at that
controversial, sometimes nettlesome question . . . Possessed of a
keen moral sense, he locates all the touchstones, bridges the fault
lines and brings to life many emblems of American history, all the
while assaying the plague of partisan politics and environmental
decay. Zoellner exposes naiveté, folly and corruption with calm,
persuasive clarity." —Bill Thompson, The Post and Courier
"Tom Zoellner has learned to see the United States in all its
bewildering diversity . . . The United States’s distinct strands of
thinking, Zoellner believes, 'are permanently braided together,'
and each generation is called to find new combinations between
them. Each of us is invited to rediscover America’s elusive soul."
—Aurelian Craiutu, Los Angeles Review of Books
"Eloquent essays that examine the relationship between the American
landscape and the national character . . . Zoellner laces this . .
. incisive account with perceptive character sketches and astute
observations. The result is a poignant reminder that in America,
'constant change is our blotchy and beautiful
inheritance.'"—Publishers Weekly
"America is a vast and daunting prospect, and Zoellner thirsts for
more. Longing for a kind of national cultural citizenship, the
author knows that absorbing even the barest fraction of a country’s
everyday majesty, and tribulation, is the work of a lifetime. He
seems up to the task . . . Zoellner exposes naiveté, foolishness,
and malfeasance with equal clarity, but he is evenhanded and
sometimes produces a piece of sardonic humor, haunting beauty, or
melancholy that pulsates on the page. He is both a first–rate
reporter with years of newspaper and magazine work behind him and a
skilled stylist who makes you want to come back for more. Highly
recommended. Zoellner will acquaint you with byways, and mores, you
never knew existed." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"If George Packer and John McPhee collaborated on a collection that
examined contemporary American life, while simultaneously
exhibiting an intense feeling for the country's vast landscape, it
might look something like Tom Zoellner's stimulating The National
Road: Dispatches from a Changing America . . . The National Road's
subjects are diverse and unfailingly interesting. No matter how
well readers think they may know the United States, it's guaranteed
there will be something here to surprise, delight or unsettle
them." —Harvey Freedenberg, Shelf Awareness
"Tom Zoellner is one of my go–to authors. He has a clear eye, a
deep soul and a very sharp pen. This new collection drives like the
best car on the Autobahn on a spring day as you speed toward the
mountains." —Luis Alberto Urrea, author of The House of Broken
Angels and The Devil's Highway
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