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Postcards from Ed

Dispatches and Salvos from an American Iconoclast

by Ed Abbey

 

Postcards from Ed presents Abbey’s uproarious and inflammatory take on:

Literature, the West, Wallace Stegner, dreams, Bob Dylan children, Hunter S. Thompson, war, John Erlich, enemies, editors, critics, Noam Chomsky, music, sex, Aspen, civilization, Christians, anarchy, family, the publishing world, Tom Wolfe and Thom Wolfe, Buddhism, trophy hunting, Brower, Foreman, the NRA, vasectomies, God, Wendell Berry, men, John McPhee, Robert Redford, wilderness, Desert Solitaire, The Monkey Wrench Gang, New York, the Sierra Club, “Mizz” Magazine, off-road vehicles, the Bible, the East, Jim Harrison, Pirsig, feminism, cheerleaders, Edward Hoagland,  patriotism,  Franny and Zooey,  the Bond Girls, cooking, Mormons, immigration, Updike, mysticism, Jack Kerouac, cowboys, love, Earth First!, cows, deserts, growth, death, women, betrayal,  and  Annie Dillard. 

“But hell, I do like to write letters. Much easier than writing books.”—Edward Abbey 

From the author of such famous/infamous books as The Monkey Wrench Gang and Desert Solitaire, “Cactus” Ed Abbey’s correspondence.

Over his forty-five-year career as author, educator, and eco-saboteur, Edward Abbey’s postcards and letters were legendary for their wisdom, savage wit, and, ultimately, their ability to speak truth to power. Whether reminding his editor to simplify (“I’ve had to waste hours erasing that storm of flyshit on the typescript”), roasting hawkish proponents of Vietnam, (“the Grim and Roaring Majority”), or lending encouragement to fellow writers such as Cormac McCarthy (“You must have made a compact with the Judge Hisself to write such a book”), here we find the man himself, intimate and revolutionary. 

For new readers, this collection is an introduction to one of the most iconoclastic, idiosyncratic, gloriously hypocritical authors of our time—an authentic American voice in the wilderness—a book that will leave them reeling. This collection chronicles his growth as a writer and important American figure, the early leanings of his environmental policies and his development as an ornery figure on the fringe of society. 



Contributors: Edited By David Petersen


Edward Abbey

Author's Bio:

Edward Abbey was born in Western Pennsylvania. In1944, at the age of seventeen, he headed west and fell in love with desert country. He studied at the University of New Mexico and the University of Edinburgh. In the late 1950s Abbey worked as a seasonal ranger for the United States Park Service at Arches National Monument (now a national park), near the town of Moab, Utah. It was there that he penned the journals that would become one of his most famous works, Desert Solitaire (1968).  Abbey's most famous work of fiction, The Monkey Wrench Gang (1975) centers around a small group of eco-warriors who travel the American West attempting to put the brakes on uncontrolled human expansion by committing acts of sabotage against industrial development projects. Abbey died in 1989 at his home near Tucson, Arizona.

Editor David Petersen is the author of nine books and the editor of four more, including Confessions of a Barbarian: Selections from the Journals of Edward Abbey. Petersen lives in a small cabin in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado

Quotes:

"Abbey's the original fly in the ointment. Give him money and prizes. Don't let anything happen to him"—Thomas McGuane

"Edward Abbey is the Thoreau of the American West."—Washington Post

"Abbey can attain a kind of glory in his writing. He takes scenes that have been well-traveled by other writers, and re-creates them as traditional American myths"—The New York Times Book Review

"We are living ... among punishments and ruins. For those who knows this, Edward Abbey's books remain an indispensable solace. His essays, and his novels, too, are 'antidotes to despair'"—Wendell Berry

"What entertains many and exasperates others is Abbey's unique prose voice. Alternately misantrophic and sentimental, enraged and hilarious, it is the voice of a full-blooded man airing his passions"—Peter Carlson, People magazine

"He is a national treasure"—The Bloomsbury Review

Postcards from Ed
Price: $ 24.95
Binding: Hardcover


Availability
In Stock: 93

Immediately
Publisher: Milkweed Editions
Published: 2006
Size: 6 X 9
Genre: Nonfiction
Pages: 304
ISBN: 9781571312846