A Safeway in Arizona Lib/E: What the Gabrielle Giffords Shooting Tells Us about the Grand Canyon State and Life in America

Author:   Tom Zoellner ,  William Hughes (Bath Spa University UK)
Publisher:   Blackstone Publishing
Edition:   Library Edition
ISBN:  

9781455130382


Publication Date:   29 December 2011
Format:   Audio  Audio Format
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
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A Safeway in Arizona Lib/E: What the Gabrielle Giffords Shooting Tells Us about the Grand Canyon State and Life in America


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Full Product Details

Author:   Tom Zoellner ,  William Hughes (Bath Spa University UK)
Publisher:   Blackstone Publishing
Imprint:   Blackstone Publishing
Edition:   Library Edition
Dimensions:   Width: 17.00cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 16.00cm
Weight:   0.295kg
ISBN:  

9781455130382


ISBN 10:   1455130389
Publication Date:   29 December 2011
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Audio
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained
The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you.

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Reviews

"""A compelling cry from the heart, this poignant book mixes an intimate personal story with painstaking journalism and in doing so draws meaning from a terrifying attempt at political assassination. A Safeway in Arizona reveals the life-and-death consequences of alienation in an asphalt desert, and it makes a simple, forceful appeal: give a damn about your neighbor."" -- ""Michael Downs, author of House of Good Hope"" ""This is a remarkable book. It was deeply reported before Tom Zoellner could have known he would write it. It was deeply reported after the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords made it absolutely necessary for him to write. Zoellner's long, intense relationships with his two main subjects--Giffords and the state of Arizona--give enormous authority to his storytelling. Unsentimental but driven by powerful emotion, the book makes crisp, riveting, expansive sense of a tragedy that was far more than a random massacre by a madman."" -- ""William Finnegan, author of Cold New World: Growing Up in a Harder Country"" ""Tom Zoellner brilliantly captures the slow death of Tucson and how one disturbed young man trapped in this emptiness shot Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and wounded and killed other people. This is a tale created by greed in the Southwest, and written in blood."" -- ""Charles Bowden, author of Down by the River"" ""Tom Zoellner's remarkable book about a moment of tragedy in Arizona ends up a story of survival--a wounded congresswoman's survival, and a wounded nation's survival as well."" -- ""Richard Rodriguez, author of Brown: The Last Discovery of America"" ""Writer and fifth-generation Arizonan Zoellner seeks 'to make sense of a fundamentally baffling event'...Concluding that events 'never happen in a vacuum, ' the author searches for clues to the tragedy in the context in which the shooting took place."" -- ""Publishers Weekly"" ""Zoellner brilliantly evokes the past and present of Arizona, the outsized personalities that have shaped the state, and the paranoia lurking at the edge of society. A sure-to-be-controversial, troubling tale of the wages of fear on the body politic."" -- ""Kirkus Reviews"""


Tom Zoellner brilliantly captures the slow death of Tucson and how one disturbed young man trapped in this emptiness shot Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and wounded and killed other people. This is a tale created by greed in the Southwest, and written in blood. -- Charles Bowden, author of Down by the River A compelling cry from the heart, this poignant book mixes an intimate personal story with painstaking journalism and in doing so draws meaning from a terrifying attempt at political assassination. A Safeway in Arizona reveals the life-and-death consequences of alienation in an asphalt desert, and it makes a simple, forceful appeal: give a damn about your neighbor. -- Michael Downs, author of House of Good Hope This is a remarkable book. It was deeply reported before Tom Zoellner could have known he would write it. It was deeply reported after the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords made it absolutely necessary for him to write. Zoellner's long, intense relationships with his two main subjects--Giffords and the state of Arizona--give enormous authority to his storytelling. Unsentimental but driven by powerful emotion, the book makes crisp, riveting, expansive sense of a tragedy that was far more than a random massacre by a madman. -- William Finnegan, author of Cold New World: Growing Up in a Harder Country Tom Zoellner's remarkable book about a moment of tragedy in Arizona ends up a story of survival--a wounded congresswoman's survival, and a wounded nation's survival as well. -- Richard Rodriguez, author of Brown: The Last Discovery of America Zoellner brilliantly evokes the past and present of Arizona, the outsized personalities that have shaped the state, and the paranoia lurking at the edge of society. A sure-to-be-controversial, troubling tale of the wages of fear on the body politic. -- Kirkus Reviews Writer and fifth-generation Arizonan Zoellner seeks 'to make sense of a fundamentally baffling event'...Concluding that events 'never happen in a vacuum, ' the author searches for clues to the tragedy in the context in which the shooting took place. -- Publishers Weekly


Author Information

Tom Zoellner is the author or coauthor of nine 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. William Hughes is a professor of political science, jazz guitarist, and an actor and narrator. Books he has narrated include FDR: The First Hundred Days by Anthony J. Badger, Brothers, Rivals, Victors by Jonathan W. Jordan, and Lincoln's Spymaster by David Hepburn Milton.

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