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Scott Carrier

Autor von Running After Antelope

2+ Werke 134 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Über den Autor

Scott Carrier has been an independent producer for public radio and is now a regular contributor to Ira Glass's "This American Life."

Werke von Scott Carrier

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The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2007 (2007) — Mitwirkender — 615 Exemplare
The Best American Travel Writing 2003 (2003) — Mitwirkender — 178 Exemplare

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As we hone our strategy and niche at Torrey House Press (THP), I am thinking a lot about the West, and the land, and what it means to live in such a beautiful, crazy place. Wallace Stegner spoke of the "geography of hope" and of a culture to match the scenery. Sometime I think, given the predominate culture in Utah, that THP should move to some place like Berkeley where there may be more than one progressive thinker to buy our books. Utah is amongst the reddest of states politically and as such anti-environmentalism is a required political plank for the rank and file here. My heck, as we say, we earmark $300,000 of taxpayer treasure to anti-wolf lobbyists every year even though there is not one known wolf in the entire state. What we really worry about, according to those lobbyists, is MEXICAN wolves. But we are dead last in the nation for per capita education funding. We are anti-immigration, anti-environment, anti-womens' health, pro gun and pro war. The word Taliban often comes to mind.

So it is with a hoot of delight and recognition that I read Scott Carrier say, "It doesn't bother me that Mormons believe God grew up as a human being on a planet circling a sun called Kolob. I'm not upset when they tell me He came to Earth in a physical body and had sex with the Virgin Mary. These beliefs, as Jefferson said, can neither pick my pocket nor break my bones." Carrier says he does have a problem with one belief, " . . . that Mormons are God's chosen people and He gave this land to them. This is Zionism, and I'm against it, wherever it occurs, because it is nothing but a lie used to justify taking land and liberty from other people." Who is this guy? I'm only on page 8 and he's got me.

Carrier goes on to examine why he loves living in Utah anyway. As do I. The next chapter starts with him examining the reason he wants to go to Afghanistan right after 9-11. "I don't believe the news. The news is selling war and we're buying it. We're the richest nation on the planet and Afghanistan is the poorest nation on the planet. It's not war, it's a business, a trap, and we are walking right into it." This guy is good, I think. He's off to Afghanistan where he sees Taliban for himself. He ends up bringing a young man back as a student to Utah County. In the end, lives are changed. Mine was, just sitting in my armchair reading this book.

… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
Mark-Bailey | 1 weitere Rezension | Jul 1, 2017 |
As we hone our strategy and niche at Torrey House Press (THP), I am thinking a lot about the West, and the land, and what it means to live in such a beautiful, crazy place. Wallace Stegner spoke of the "geography of hope" and of a culture to match the scenery. Sometime I think, given the predominate culture in Utah, that THP should move to some place like Berkeley where there may be more than one progressive thinker to buy our books. Utah is amongst the reddest of states politically and as such anti-environmentalism is a required political plank for the rank and file here. My heck, as we say, we earmark $300,000 of taxpayer treasure to anti-wolf lobbyists every year even though there is not one known wolf in the entire state. What we really worry about, according to those lobbyists, is MEXICAN wolves. But we are dead last in the nation for per capita education funding. We are anti-immigration, anti-environment, anti-womens' health, pro gun and pro war. The word Taliban often comes to mind.

So it is with a hoot of delight and recognition that I read Scott Carrier say, "It doesn't bother me that Mormons believe God grew up as a human being on a planet circling a sun called Kolob. I'm not upset when they tell me He came to Earth in a physical body and had sex with the Virgin Mary. These beliefs, as Jefferson said, can neither pick my pocket nor break my bones." Carrier says he does have a problem with one belief, " . . . that Mormons are God's chosen people and He gave this land to them. This is Zionism, and I'm against it, wherever it occurs, because it is nothing but a lie used to justify taking land and liberty from other people." Who is this guy? I'm only on page 8 and he's got me.

Carrier goes on to examine why he loves living in Utah anyway. As do I. The next chapter starts with him examining the reason he wants to go to Afghanistan right after 9-11. "I don't believe the news. The news is selling war and we're buying it. We're the richest nation on the planet and Afghanistan is the poorest nation on the planet. It's not war, it's a business, a trap, and we are walking right into it." This guy is good, I think. He's off to Afghanistan where he sees Taliban for himself. He ends up bringing a young man back as a student to Utah County. In the end, lives are changed. Mine was, just sitting in my armchair reading this book.

… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
torreyhouse | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 10, 2014 |
Scott Carrier frequently appears on the radio show "This American Life." While not all of the stories in here measure up to the best of the ones he's read on the radio, this is a solid collection. Carrier is a good storyteller, with more than a touch of the darkness inside us all (some perhaps more than others). It's for this darkness and the simple joys (often discovered through nature) he occasionally counters it with that I like him.
 
Gekennzeichnet
S.D. | Apr 5, 2014 |

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