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A Race to the Bottom of Crazy

Dispatches from Arizona

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The bestselling author of Dispatches from Pluto and The Deepest South of All turns his sharp wit and observational powers on the epicenter of America's most divisive issues: Arizona.
When Richard Grant and his wife moved with their four-year-old daughter back to Tucson, Arizona, where the couple first met, he expected to easily rekindle his love of the region. Instead, he found a housing market gone haywire, rampant election conspiracies, and right-wing political violence alarmingly close to his home and family. Undocumented immigration was surging, and the state was also on the front lines of climate change, breaking heat and drought records, and running out of long-term water supplies. Under these circumstances, Grant wondered how he might raise a happy, well-adjusted child who believes in the future. Yet these concerns weren't keeping people away: Arizona was simultaneously experiencing some of the nation's highest population growth.

In A Race to the Bottom of Crazy, Grant mixes memoir, research, and reporting in a quest to understand what makes Arizona such a confounding and irresistible place. He visits the world's largest machine-gun shoot; takes a sunset boat cruise with a US Congressman and a group of far-right patriots; rides through the desert with a Border Patrol agent; and goes camping with his family in breathtaking mountain ranges that rise out of the desert like islands in the sky. Interspersed with these adventures are recollections of his previous stint in the state, including his friendship with cult writer Charles Bowden and years living off the grid with smugglers, dope farmers, and outlaws on the Mexican border. Ultimately, Grant arrives at the conclusion that Arizona has always been a scattershot improvisation, with bizarre and extreme behavior in its DNA.

This book is an entertaining, illuminating, and essential guide to understanding modern America at its most overheated.
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    • Booklist

      August 1, 2024
      Transplanted Englishman Grant loves Arizona: the awe-inspiring landscapes, the unique biosphere, and many of the people. But there has always been an undercurrent of lawlessness in the deserts and mountains of this landing zone for loners and miscreants, with the hard-boiled investigative reporter and impassioned and daring writer Charles Bowden among their number. From his home in Tucson, Grant investigates right-wing politics, gun mania, paranoia, and conspiracy theories that have exploded even as the state becomes more Democratic. Grant interleaves stories of places he's been, the sometimes eye-rolling way towns in Arizona got their names, the gun shows and firing ranges, the proximity to the headquarters of several drug cartels, and people he's known into the broader history of the state. He offers a strong emphasis on Arizona's ecology and its degradation. He concludes each chapter with random trivia on the state's craziness. Part memoir, part reportage, this book of dispatches chronicles how Grant found a home and made a family in the midst of the chaos and beauty of a unique and challenging place.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2024
      A British journalist profiles the American city and state where he has spent half his life. Grant first lived in Tucson on something of a whim in the early 1990s as a 20-something looking for a life with few constraints or demands, pushing the boundaries of both luck and risk. Over the next 20 years there, he married, divorced, and married again; built a robust freelance journalism career chasing stories flavored with danger; and consorted with various slightly offbeat writers and creators. After about a decade away, Grant arrives back in Tucson with his wife and young daughter shortly before the Covid-19 pandemic, finding a beloved city somewhat changed and himself leaning more into his role as a father, less enchanted by the personal risks that marked his past pursuits. The story of Grant's return to Arizona and his keen, bemused observations of its position in the present sociopolitical context combine with memories from his earlier days and outline the contours of his own life, career, relationships, and longing for excitement. His reflections strike a chord of wistful satisfaction, tinged with just a hint of late-professional bravado, but this is counterbalanced with the humility and sincere wonder contained in his musings on his daughter and parenthood. Into the space created by his own narrative threads, he pours the characters, politics, and landscape of the city and state he has made home, revealed through accounts of a cherished literary mentor, polarizing campaign rallies, and family camping trips. Shot through with harrowing events and idiosyncratic characters, Grant's text resists easy tropes to deliver an endearing, if at times absurd, portrait of a surprisingly alluring American hotbed for every issue from immigration and gun laws to climate change and Native American tribal rights. Tender and hopeful, an engaging read.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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