Thursday, October 26, 2006
Chuck Klosterman IV: A Decade of Curious People and Dangerous Ideas by Chuck Klosterman
I have been a fan of Klosterman since reading Fargo Rock City in 2001. His other books have been hit or miss, so I am unsure if this will be a better alternative. However, in reading just the first few sections, I realized that I have never read his interviews, just his books. This is a refreshing change of material for me.
From Publishers Weekly
Fans of Klosterman’s Ritalin-paced pop culture criticism (Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs) will eagerly devour this collection of previously published essays. Whether investigating Latino fans of British pop icon Morrissey, interviewing female tribute bands like Lez Zeppelin and AC/DShe or eating nothing but Chicken McNuggets for a week, Klosterman is always entertaining and often insightful. But other than a sympathetic profile of Billy Joel, Klosterman rarely strays from his favorite topics: heavy metal music, television, sports and sex. Perhaps this career overview is his way of recycling old themes into some kind of new “defining endeavor,” as he describes the title inspired by Led Zeppelin IV (as it is unofficially called). This would make perfect sense given his work so far: Fargo Rock City was an original and confident debut (like Led Zeppelin I); his newest book definitely has kick, but overall it’s a mixed bag of collected essays—strong and not-so-strong performances—its parts are greater than the whole.