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The Golden Door: Letters to America [Hardcover]

A.A. Gill
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Book Description

28 Jun 2012

Where were you when John F. Kennedy was shot? Today the answer more often than not is going to be 'not born'. You have to be some way past 45 to know where you were when Kennedy was shot in Dallas in 1963. A generation later, you could ask the same question about the World Trade Centre. Where were you when the plane hit the twin towers on 11 September 2001? But this book is about what happened between those two moments. The world's perception of America changed between those two waves.

AA Gill's book is about the things he's always found admirable and optimistic about the United States and its citizens. Two of the happiest times of his life were spent living in New York and the mountains of Kentucky. The contrast between the two couldn't have been more complicated and different. The America he found was contradictory and elusive, not the simpletons' place he'd been led to believe. It was still a list of raw ingredients rather than the old stew of Europe.

Now AA Gill takes another look at the America he knew in the Seventies, a place that seemed to hold promise, practical energy and a plan for the future. How did it become the political magnetic north against which the liberal intellectuals from the rest of the world set their opinions. Why is it so easily mocked, so comprehensively blamed, so thoughtlessly hated?

The book is a collection of linked essays based around places that will open up truths and mythologies about America and Americans. The theme of his journey will be searching for 'the home of'. Every other small town in America boasts on its Welcome sign that it is the home of something or other. A mountain, a mine, peaches, spotted pigs, a president, the world's biggest ball of string, barbeques, the deepest hole. So that's where AA Gill starts, going to find the home of everything.


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The Golden Door: Letters to America + A.A. Gill is Further Away + Here & There: Collected Travel Writing
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: W&N (28 Jun 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 029785450X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0297854500
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.2 x 3.2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 262,219 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

the hilariously waspish barbs, evocative turns of phrase and deliciously choice facts are as super-sized as ever (Tom Hawker WANDERLUST 20120701)

This immensely entertaining collection of pieces inspired by his loveand knowledge of America provides a welcome reminder of his gifts (Nick Rennison SUNDAY TIMES 20120708)

he's as craftily observant and intelligently witty as ever.. illuminating stuff (ESQUIRE 20120801)

Gill succeeds in convincing us that he possesses a deep knowledge of his subject. (Toby Young MAIL ON SUNDAY 20120715)

Delving into American life with his trademark hilarity, he explroes immigration and sex, philanthropy and guns (Edwina Langley THE LADY 20120810)

he is often witty and always readable (Lewis Jones THE SPECTATOR 20120804)

AA Gill's admirers won't be disappointed by The Golden Door, a thundering polemic on the joys and merits of America.. It's immensely entertaining. (Stephen Bleach SUNDAY TIMES 20121125)

Book Description

Britain's most readable columnist takes on his biggest challenge - America.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Land of God and Gold 28 Sep 2012
Format:Hardcover
Beautifully written as ever, but what do we learn from Gill's America? We learn that he has a family connection, emigrants that he stayed with in his youth and is still in touch with today. We learn that he has a Smith and Wesson revolver on his writing desk, symbolic of that great and terrible nation. And, we learn that he always loves New York because he once loved in New York.

This is no massacre, as his The Angry Island was on the English. But, neither does he shy away from America's faults: he snipes at its belligerence and its inequality.

America was once a blank slate. It was where a clapped out Europe spilled out to forge a new nation, where no hidebound preexisting order would block an individual from 'making it'. From the first tough frontiersmen to the Pilgrim Father refugees to the waves of economic immigrants, America is a land in flux. Gill points out that the future culture of America is being shaped and will be increasingly shaped by its Asian and Latin American immigrants. Probably, change from this quarter will shape the wider world's future too.

The book's subtitle inverts the title of Alistair Cooke's famous series of radio essays. We read interesting connections and learn more about Gill's place amongst columnists. It is Cooke who introduces Vintage Mencken, his selection of H.L. Mencken, America's finest ever columnist. Gill notes that essayists divide between Montaigne's restraint and Mencken's pyrotechnics. Montaigne meanders while Mencken goes for the jugular. Cooke is in the former camp. Gill, in the latter camp, describes Mencken's rise and fall; he focuses on Mencken's career-peak report of the Deep South's Scopes trial, where Darwin battled God for admittance to the school system.

As usual with Gill we see with fresh eyes. We Europeans and Americans are now much the same: Europe has learnt from America, while America has spent that mass human capital which it took from Europe. Gill expects that his transatlantic family correspondence will die with him and his generation. One great experiment is over, and a new adventure just beginning. Modernisation, shaped first by Europe and then by America, will continue to transform the wider world. Consider Asia's emergence; think of China. Again we, who once dominated, will wail and wow at new ways of thinking and behaving. And again we in Europe, but also in America this time, will have change forced upon us.
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1 of 9 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Dreadful 17 Jan 2013
Format:Hardcover
As an avid reader this is probably the most disappointing book that I have come across. It reads like a poor travel guide,the text is laboured and badly written. I wonder if Gill has really spent much time in the US as some of his facts are misplaced. Gill is a television programme reviewer for a British news paper.His reviews tend to be overcritical, unclear and constantly refer to Tristans. He has also been found out for publishing reviews of programmes that he has not even seen.Thus in keeping with his approach to his work this review is based on a book that I have not actually read!
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1 of 10 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Yaaaaaawwwwwwn 3 Sep 2012
By Codders
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
A totally myopic review of the US that belongs in a bad travel brochure . Completely devoid of any humour whatsoever the Author does nothing but say what he likes about America without mentioning a single thing that's bad about the place . He even defends the amount of guns per household . The most boring book I've read in my life .
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