I just love when the holiday season comes around each year. Is it the food? The generosity? The family time? Partially, but the holiday season is when the Best Americans come out! I read several of them, but my favorite has been Non-Required reading ever since its first incarnation. It was an Onion article that earned my devotion, the one about Marilyn Manson going door to door trying to shock people. Have you ever feared dying from laughter? I have.
This edition, like all the others increased my awareness of the world and my own relation to it. Which brings me to the first shout out. David Foster Wallace, who's written a lot of stuff that I just couldn't get into (Infinity and Beyond, anyone?), contributed a commencement speech that he gave at Kenyon in 2005. It blew my mind wide open. The students in my high school English class are always asking me why I am always smiling. I just kind of took it as rhetorical, but now I understand my own development, thanks to DFW. When I was in high school, I did not smile very much. Actually, I was extremely bitter and hostile. The fact was, it made me mad that life wasn't exactly the way I thought it should be. Since high school, I have gotten to the point where I recognize how fortunate I am compared to other people, and I am serene to the point of bafflement. I don't know if I'd have gotten to this place without my college education, but I'm sure it catalyzed the process.
Vonnegut's writing lessons were hilarious, Sweeney's religious meanderings were full of wonderful precision of language (reminding me of Kevin Smith's Dogma), and Saunders's fluctuating feelings about the Xtreme luxury of Dubai were an insight into how the disparity of wealth in the world affects people. I also enjoyed Rakoff's ambivalent conversion to American citizenship.
Murakami's story was a great modern parable about love, Lewis's essay said a lot about the insidious distrust of African-Americans that came to the surface during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, and Downey's sympathetic tale of an Al Qaeda soldier's journey illustrates the sentiment that in every conflict, each combatant always believes that he is right.
And I loved the new stuff: the best first lines, the best new words, and especially the best facts about Chuck Norris!
As with any BANR, there were some pieces not to my taste, but on the whole, it has yet to disappoint.