Cluelessness: A Book of Mirrors

Author:   David A Schmaltz
Publisher:   Outskirts Press
ISBN:  

9781977279651


Pages:   204
Publication Date:   22 April 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Our Price $63.23 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Cluelessness: A Book of Mirrors


Overview

What kind of person writes a book about Cluelessness? Not someone who has conquered it. Someone still living within it, noticing it daily, and finding that the real difficulty was never the Cluelessness itself but how poorly most of us cope with its inevitable presence. David Schmaltz has spent decades observing the ways humans navigate a universe far more complex than any of us can fully comprehend. In Cluelessness: A Book of Mirrors, he turns that observation inward, offering ninety short essays that catch the author - and the reader - in the act of not knowing, misreading, over-planning, under-noticing, and stumbling forward anyway. This is not a self-help book. There are no twelve steps, no prescriptions, no promises of transformation. It offers something rarer: a sustained, wry, warm-hearted investigation into what it actually feels like to be a finite human being embedded in an infinite, indifferent, and occasionally delightful universe. Schmaltz writes about cooking for a crowd without sleeping the night before, about the studied Cluelessness that lets us ignore what we cannot afford to know, about the difference between problems and difficulties, about why driving the speed limit might qualify as a moral act, and about why the most important things we were ever taught arrived without anyone noticing the teaching. He considers the seductive comfort of Studied Cluelessness, the paradox of Knowing Better, and the quiet dignity of maintaining one's convictions in a culture that rewards getting away with things. He explores what it means to truly cope with impossibility, why the pursuit of excellence so often guarantees mediocrity, and how the humble public library became the last genuinely decent institution in American civic life. The essays range across daily life - traffic jams, grocery runs, church league softball, learning to cook, reading too many library books - and into larger questions about democracy, competition, truth, liberty, and what it means to make any difference at all. Each story functions as a mirror, angled just so, offering the reader a glimpse of themselves going about their own daily Cluelessness. Schmaltz writes from the tradition of the great American essayists - observant, self-deprecating, philosophically ambitious without pretension, and genuinely funny without trying too hard. His is a voice readers quickly trust because it never claims to know more than it does. He describes this work as philosophical, autobiographical, historical, and fictional all at once. The label fits. These essays think carefully, emerge from a specific life, document a particular American moment, and hold their facts lightly enough to let deeper truths through. By the end of Cluelessness, the reader has spent time with someone genuinely attempting to live with integrity, curiosity, and good humor inside conditions no one fully understands. That turns out to be excellent company. The book doesn't solve Cluelessness - it couldn't, and it knows it couldn't - but it offers something more useful: the reassurance that we are all, as Schmaltz puts it, Clueless on this bus, and that coping with that reality a little better might be everything we've got. For anyone who has ever suspected that the experts don't know much more than the rest of us - and found that suspicion oddly liberating rather than terrifying.

Full Product Details

Author:   David A Schmaltz
Publisher:   Outskirts Press
Imprint:   Outskirts Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.281kg
ISBN:  

9781977279651


ISBN 10:   1977279651
Pages:   204
Publication Date:   22 April 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Author Information

David A. Schmaltz is the author of the best-selling The Blind Men and the Elephant, Mastering Project Work (Berrett-Koehler, 2003), and the founder of True North, pgs, a boutique consulting firm that taught an adolescent Silicon Valley how their projects were actually managed. He lives overlooking the center of his universe in Walla Walla, Washington, with his wife, Amy Schwab, The Muse. Cover illustration by D. Wilder Schmaltz

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRGC26

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List