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A Language Dark Enough: Essays on Exile

by Tony Whedon
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Overview

In eighteen essays collected under a title from Dante's Inferno, poet Tony Whedon travels the world in search of a language that describes "home." Through music, words, movements through time and space-all that speaks on canvas, stone, and film-the voices of exiles "here bear witness.

Synopsis

In eighteen essays collected under a title from Dante's Inferno, poet Tony Whedon travels the world in search of a language that describes "home." Through music, words, movements through time and space-all that speaks on canvas, stone, and film-the voices of exiles "here bear witness.

Publishers Weekly

A former professional jazz trombonist turned professor of writing at Vermont's Johnson State College, Whedon draws on his musical background and passion for literature in this collection of personal ruminations, wild travel tales and riffs on poverty and political oppression. The book's title comes from a line in Dante's Inferno, appropriate since Whedon seems intent on descending into hellish situations. As he writes about teaching English in China, or navigating governmental procedure in Haiti, Cuba and Ecuador, his restless energy suffuses both his travels and his writing style. Whedon doesn't linger in one place for long, and even his thoughts seem to change focus frequently. One moment he's describing why he's drawn to Mexico, and within a few sentences he's shifted to a tale about a reporter whose mysterious death still fascinates him. Soon after, it's on to Ambrose Bierce and Pancho Villa. A less skilled writer would have made such stream of consciousness prose seem like a lesson in how to write for readers with very short attention spans. But Whedon writes like a jazz soloist, dipping into different moods and tones with artful improvisation, yet keeping his focus throughout on the overarching theme of exploring dispossession. Although he sometimes stumbles into politically shaky situations inadvertently, he never ignores the ugliness of what he sees, and his cool observations bring the work to a different level. His self-imposed exile has many of the elements that make good travel memoirs even better: whimsy, grace and contemplation. (June 15) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

A former professional jazz trombonist turned professor of writing at Vermont's Johnson State College, Whedon draws on his musical background and passion for literature in this collection of personal ruminations, wild travel tales and riffs on poverty and political oppression. The book's title comes from a line in Dante's Inferno, appropriate since Whedon seems intent on descending into hellish situations. As he writes about teaching English in China, or navigating governmental procedure in Haiti, Cuba and Ecuador, his restless energy suffuses both his travels and his writing style. Whedon doesn't linger in one place for long, and even his thoughts seem to change focus frequently. One moment he's describing why he's drawn to Mexico, and within a few sentences he's shifted to a tale about a reporter whose mysterious death still fascinates him. Soon after, it's on to Ambrose Bierce and Pancho Villa. A less skilled writer would have made such stream of consciousness prose seem like a lesson in how to write for readers with very short attention spans. But Whedon writes like a jazz soloist, dipping into different moods and tones with artful improvisation, yet keeping his focus throughout on the overarching theme of exploring dispossession. Although he sometimes stumbles into politically shaky situations inadvertently, he never ignores the ugliness of what he sees, and his cool observations bring the work to a different level. His self-imposed exile has many of the elements that make good travel memoirs even better: whimsy, grace and contemplation. (June 15) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

In this collection of 18 essays-which won the Mid-List Press First Series Award for Creative Nonfiction-Whedon (writing & literature, Johnson State Coll.; fiction editor, Green Mountains Review) documents how his love of music, art, and literature enabled him to be less of a stranger in places like Haiti, China, Mexico, Cuba, Ecuador, and Spain. As an American educational exchange instructor in China, he experienced the students' reaction to the Cultural Revolution through the poetry and essays they studied and wrote, while in Havana, he surrounded himself with the joyful madness of the local musicians. Throughout, Whedon embraces cultural differences and emphasizes the resilience of people struggling in countries where the political climate can make daily living especially difficult. In conjunction with his travel essays, Whedon also offers a few mood pieces revealing some of his personal challenges. Full of references to the classics, this collection is suitable for literature and writing collections in academic libraries.-Joyce Sparrow, Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas Cty., FL Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 2004
Publisher
Mid-List Press
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780922811588

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