The Best Creative Nonfiction
<p><strong>“Intelligent but accessible, and often poignant . . . [by] the biggest talents on the essay and blog beat.†―<em>Publishers Weekly</em> (on Vol. 2)</strong></p> Anyone still asking, “What is creative nonfiction?†will find the answer in this collection of artfully crafted, true stories. Selected by Lee Gutkind, the “godfather behind creative nonfiction,†and the staff of <em>Creative Nonfiction</em>, these stories―ranging from immersion journalism to intensely personal essays―illustrate the genre’s power and potential. Edwidge Danticat recalls her Uncle Moise’s love of a certain four-letter word and finds in his abandonment of the word near the end of his life the true meaning of exile. In “Literary Murder,†Julianna Baggott traces her roots as a novelist to her family’s “strange, desperate (sometimes conniving and glorious) past†and writes about her decision, in <em>The Madam</em>, to kill off a character based on her grandfather. And Sean Rowe explains why, if you <em>must</em> get arrested, Selma, Alabama, is the place to do it. This exciting and expansive array of works and voices is sure to impress and delight.