8 of 11 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Unbearable, June 15, 2011
By Betsy Lee Bohannon - See all my reviews
This review is from: American Vertigo: Traveling
America in the Footsteps of Tocqueville (Paperback)
A lawyer learns quickly that
a short brief is difficult to write. A long, wordy brief is easy in comparison.
This maxim reflects the truth that clear thinking results in crisp, concise
writing. Muddy thinking, however, results in turgid verbosity. This book
takes "turgid verbosity" to a new level. Who was the target audience
for this book? It appears to be the author himself, and perhaps other
"French intellectuals," whatever that term might mean. I am sure they
are very impressed with the use of obscure and bombastic words strung together
with laborious sentences and a general lack of organization. I am not. I'm also
glad that we don't have to suffer such intellectuals in this country - a point
the author ignores.
Like many others, I put this
book down after several hundred pages. Not because it was too hard for me to
understand, but because I resent an author writing so poorly that I have to
exert myself so much to understand what he is trying to say. The resentment is
especially strong when I hear that the author is allegedly a famous
intellectual.
Terrible writing aside, the content is also lacking.
The author's attempt to define America reminds one of the fable where several
blind men attempt to describe an elephant. No correct picture of the image
emerges. No political incorrectness intended, but the author has attempted to
define America by describing a large number of tiny minorities. One example
will suffice -- gun rights activists who collect Nazi memorabilia. It is
patently obvious to everyone in this country (except apparently the author)
that this microscopically small subset does not begin to accurately describe
America's (very diverse) attitudes towards guns and gun rights. I would venture
to say that - as Garrison Keilor aptly observed with many specifics - the
author failed in his essential purpose. The author either fails to appreciate
or chooses to ignore that his vignettes of American culture are not
representative of the culture. Whether the author "likes" America or
not is beside the point. The samples of American culture are badly chosen and
the writing is worse.
This book really, really makes me want to spend a
year in France and write a book for the French about France.
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