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3.5 

Ghost Dogs: On Killers and Kin

By Andre Dubus III
Ghost Dogs: On Killers and Kin by Andre Dubus III digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

“This may be the best book you’ll read in years.” —Bill Heavey, Wall Street Journal

From the literary master and best-selling author of Townie, reflections on a life of challenges, contradictions, and fulfillments.

During childhood summers in Louisiana, Andre Dubus III’s grandfather taught him that men’s work is hard. As an adult, whether tracking down a drug lord in Mexico as a bounty hunter or grappling with privilege while living with a rich girlfriend in New York City, Dubus worked—at being a better worker and a better human being.

In Ghost Dogs, Dubus’s nonfiction prowess is on full display in his retelling of his own successes, failures, triumphs, and pain. In his longest essay, “If I Owned a Gun,” Dubus reflects on the empowerment and shame he felt in keeping a gun, and his decision, ultimately, to give it up. Elsewhere, he writes of a violent youth and of settled domesticity and fatherhood, about the omnipresent expectations and contradictions of masculinity, about the things writers remember and those they forget. Drawing upon kindred literary spirits from Rilke to Rumi to Tim O’Brien, Ghost Dogs renders moments of personal revelation with emotional generosity and stylistic grace, ultimately standing as essential witness and testimony to the art of the essay.

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12 Reviews

3.5
“Revealing. Emotional.”
“This is a really raw book. In a 1946 book, author Paul Gallico—best remembered now as the author of THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE—wrote something that has been co-opted or slightly reworded by authors ever since. He said, "It is only when you open your veins and bleed onto the page a little that you establish contact with your reader." This is what Dubus does with this book. It's not an easy book to read by any means, and the reader can almost feel Dubus as he squirms, relaying uncomfortable truths about himself that most of us wouldn't admit. Dubus, throughout his life, has seemed to struggle with growing up poor, in moving a lot so always being the outcast, in being first bullied, then fighting back and responding with violence, in growing up where physical work was the way to gain respect. Contrast that with the man who is wealthy, who built his own home and has a safe place for him and his family, who has turned his back on violence and now only wants peace, in making a living putting words on a page. The reader can feel these paradigm shifts twisting him, and Dubus struggles with them. He loves guns, but refuses to have one in the house. He never wants to fight, but still feels the thrill of it. I imagine this is much of what John Lennon also struggled with...a violent youth that begged for world peace, an abandoned kid who grew into global adoration, from having little money to having more than he knew what to do with, yet sang of "having no possessions." Dubus conveys these struggles beautifully. He's a master of language, and he gets to the heart of the issue, then slices into it to reveal those painful truths. In other reviews, I'm reading the complaints of the repetition of facts, and they're not wrong, there is, however, I suspect these were a collection of separate essays written over different times. Taken separately, the explanations would have been required and, to be honest, while there is repetition, it's also brief. Andre Dubus III is always someone worth reading, whether it's his fiction, or his non-fiction.”

About Andre Dubus III

Andre Dubus III is the author of Such Kindness and eight other books, including the bestsellers Townie and House of Sand and Fog, a National Book Award Finalist in Fiction and an Oprah’s Book Club selection. He lives in Newburyport, Massachusetts.

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