Homeland

Illustrated by Michael Williamson
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Product Details

Format Hardcover
ISBN-10 1-58322-627-3
ISBN-13 978-1-58322-627-8
Publication Date May 2004
Nb of pages 384
Illustrations 40
Illustration type Illustrations, color

Format Paperback
ISBN-10 1-58322-681-8
ISBN-13 978-1-58322-681-0
Publication Date Jul 2005
Nb of pages 288


Description

Homeland is Pulitzer Prize winning author Maharidge's biggest and most ambitious book yet, weaving together the disparate and contradictory strands of contemporary American society-common decency alongside race rage, the range of dissenting voices, and the roots of discontent that defy political affiliation. Here are American families who can no longer pay their medical bills, who've lost high-wage-earning jobs to NAFTA. And here are white supremacists who claim common ground with progressives. Maharidge's approach is rigorously historical, creating a tapestry of today as it is lived in America, a self-portrait that is shockingly different from what we're used to seeing and yet which rings of truth.

Dale Maharidge is among the very few American journalists attempting to describe the full range of the American experience. Together with Michael Williamson, who's produced several other important books about the other America, including their first book together, Journey to Nowhere: The Saga of the New Underclass, based on a three-year journey through homeless encampments from coast to coast, and The Last Great American Hobo. Journey to Nowhere inspired Bruce Springsteen to write two of the songs on his album The Ghost of Tom Joad, including "Youngstown," based on a conversation between Maharidge and two former steelworkers, and "New Timer." And Their Children After Them won the Pulitzer Prize in 1990. Maharidge has been a visiting professor of journalism at Columbia University and Stanford. Maharidge was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University in 1998. He now lives in Northern California.

Michael Williamson is a photographer for the Washington Post with numerous honors including the World Press Photo and Nikon World Understanding Through Photography awards.


Reviews

Press Reviews

Los Angeles Times
Maharidge posits that we were a country in peril even before the terrorist attacks, a nation in which many were suffering in dire economic straits . . . this book is a call for all Americans to examine our beliefs, our anger, our racial prejudices and the economic injustices fueling our unease.

In These Times
In Homeland, Maharidge breaks new ground in the genre of 9/11 journalism by heading into heartland America . . . . The tales Maharidge relates expose the synergy between economics and racism in Rust
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Publishers Weekly
This book emerges as a sensitive, heartfelt examination of a wounded America whose wounds existed long before the terrorist attacks.

Sacramento Bee
A unique and insightful look at how America changed after the terrorist attack of Sept. 11, 2001, and what it means for the future.

Steve Weinberg National Book Critics Circle member special to the Orland Sentinel, July 11, 2004
Dale Maharidge is one of the most accomplished journalists of the past 30 years. His work is almost always depressing in its focus on the underprivileged, yet unexpectedly uplifting in the way it gives the underprivileged voices and faces.

Studs Terkel, author most recently of Hope Dies Last
When, some years ago, I read Journey to Nowhere by Dale Maharidge and Michael Williamson, I knew these were true journalists, who sought out small truths in large circumstances. Now they have topped
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David Corn, Washington editor of The Nation and author of The Lies of George W. Bush: Mastering the Politics of Deception
Like a foreign correspondent assigned to explore a strange land, Dale Maharidge traveled through the American heartland after 9/11 and returned with harrowing tales of a divided nation. He offers an
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Danny Goldberg, Chairman and CEO, Artemis Records, and author of Dispatches From the Culture Wars: How the Left Lost Teen Spirit
By vividly depicting real-life stories, Dale Maharidge has breathed life, drama, and emotion into the complex civil liberties issues that have faced Americans since 9/11. Until reading Homeland I
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Nadine Strossen, President, American Civil Liberties Union, and Professor, New York Law School
Homeland is the book we need at a time when the government is insisting for reasons of security on more and more access to the private lives of its citizens, while providing less and less
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