Home Books Fire Season: Selected Essays 1984–2021

Fire Season: Selected Essays 1984–2021

Fire Season: Selected Essays 1984–2021

by Gary Indiana

Seven Stories Press ·2022 ·448 pages
Near the Top
Near the Top
I Index
66/99
Top of the Pile

78/99

Critics' Rating Index

Near the Top

53/99

Readers' Rating Index

n/a

Scholars' Citation Index

15/99

Volume of Reviews

10/99

Volume of Reader Ratings

Sign in to add to your shelf, rate, or review this book.


About This Book

The novelist, cultural critic, and indie icon serves up sometimes bitchy, always generous, erudite, and joyful assessments from the last thirty-five years of cutting edge film, art, and literature. Whether he's describing Tracy Emin or Warhol, the films of Barbet Schroeder ("Schroeder is well aware that life is not a narrative; that we impose form on the movements of chance, contingency, and impulse....") or the installations of Barbara Kruger ("Kruger compresses the telling exchanges of lived experience that betray how skewed our lives are…"), Indiana is never just describing. His writing is refreshing, erudite, joyful. Indiana champions shining examples of literary and artistic merit regardless of whether the individual artist or writer is famous; asserts a standard of care and tradition that has nothing to do with the ivory tower establishment; is unafraid to deliver the coup de grâce when someone needs to say the emperor has no clothes; speaks in the same breath—in the same discerning, insolent, eloquent way—about high art and pop culture. Few writers could get away with saying the things Gary Indiana does. And when the writing is this good, it's also political, plus it's a riot of fun on the page. Here is Gary Indiana on Euro Disney resort park in Marne-la-Valée outside of Paris: John Berger compares the art of Disney to that of Francis Bacon. He says that the same essential horror lurks in both, and that it springs from the viewer's imagining: There is nothing else. Even as a child, I understood how unbearable it would be to be trapped inside a cartoon frame.


Reviews

"Maddeningly, it is not indicated in Fire Season where the essays were first published ..."

Sasha Frere-Jones· Bookforum Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Each entry is marked by vivid imagery and the author's scathing, eloquent wit ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"When I was at university in the mid-Eighties and setting out in the world soon thereafter, Indiana's sensibility, and indeed his canon, were formative for my cohort, and it's enormously pleasurable to revisit his brilliant mind ..."

Claire Messud· Harpers Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

Preview


Reader Reviews

0 reviews

Sign in to write a review.

No reader reviews yet. Be the first!