| HarperCollins press release for "Off Main Street" Prior to writing the Bestselling Population 485 (based on personal experiences
involving firefighting and small-town life), Michael Perry traveled the United States as a
freelance writer for publications as diverse as Esquire,
Salon.com, Utne Reader, the music magazine No Depression, and the trucking magazine Road King. With the release of OFF MAIN
STREET: Barnstormers, Prophets & Gatemouths
Gator (Perennial Trade Paperback Original; April 12, 2005), Perry shows his unique
knack for bring light and humor to: God, cow manure, baldness, lot lizards, Klan wizards,
small-town funerals and much more in a series of essays.
In an introduction that begins, I am
a stranger in a strange town, and the man standing next to me has just removed his pants,
Perry reflects on the book tour, one in which
he encountered presidential candidate John Edwards:
I thought of toothpaste and hairspray . . . the contrast between our respective
perkiness was alarming Perry wonders why writers claim book tours are difficult
while reporting the day of his first television appearance he discovered a facial blemish
that turned his nose into a pulsing red schnozz followed by a bizarre book
signing moment involving an aggressive fan and antibacterial ointment.
With Red State/Blue State issues dominating culture
and politics, Perrys essay Branding God
provides a look behind the headlines, interweaving the story of his Christian
fundamentalist upbringing and subsequent drift from faith with the story of a
fire-and-brimstone preacher, a mysterious dark-haired girl, and rough-and-tumble scenes
from his days as a Wyoming cowboy.
The
ten percent of Americans afflicted with kidney stones will find Perrys firsthand
account of his own bout with a stone both horrifying and hilarious. Recalling that Ben Franklin used to stand on his
head to relieve his kidney stone troubles, Perry tried the same thing in a motel bathtub. He wound up in the hospital.
Musician
profiles include pieces on country music stars Sara
Evans, Aaron Tippin, folk legend Ramblin Jack Elliott, controversial singer Steve Earle, and yep, a big ol essay on Elvis.
Also included:
- A traveling
butcher whose daughter is in desperate need of a kidney
- A heartwarming
and breaking Christmas story set on a
fleet of country music tour buses
- The kidnapping of a giant Big Boy statue in Toledo
- The goofy
cultural significance of Americas
water towers
- Bunking beside
a prostitute in Central America
- Gearjammers
essays on hitching with truckers in a convoy
and life on the road
I trust you will enjoy the review copy of OFF MAIN
STREET and the Population 485 CD, read by Perry. I hope we can
discuss setting up interviews with this gifted writer/humorist at your earliest
convenience.
Sincerely,
Tim Brazier
tim.brazier@harpercollins.com
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