Greyhound
In 2006, in the wake of several miscarriages, Joanna Pocock travelled by Greyhound bus across the US from Detroit to Los Angeles. Seventeen years later, now in her 50s, she undertakes the same journey, revisiting the same cities, edgelands, highways and motels in the footsteps of the few women writers – Simone de Beauvoir, Ethel Mannin and Irma Kurtz – who chronicled their own road trips across the US. In Greyhound, Pocock explores the overlap of place and memory, the individual with the communal, and the privatization of public space as she navigates two very different landscapes – an earlier, less atomized America, and a current one mired in inequality, as it teeters on the brink of environmental catastrophe. Her focus is on the built-upon environment: the rivers of tarmac, the illuminated gas stations, the sprawling suburbs and the sites of extraction created specifically to fuel contemporary life. Combining memoir, reportage, environmental writing and literary criticism, Greyhound is a moving and immersive book that captures an America in the throes of late capitalism with all its beauty, horror and complexity.
Joanna Pocock is an Irish-Canadian writer living in London. Her writing has notably appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Nation, Guardian US and she is a contributing editor at the Dark Mountain project. She won the 2018 Fitzcarraldo Editions Essay Prize for Surrender and in 2021 she was awarded the Arts Foundation's Environmental Writing Fellowship. Greyhound is her second book.
Versandkostenfreie Lieferung! (eBook-Download)
Vorbestellerartikel: Dieser Artikel erscheint am 14. August 2025
- Artikel-Nr.: SW9781804271391110164
- Artikelnummer SW9781804271391110164
-
Autor
Joanna Pocock
- Wasserzeichen ja
- Verlag Fitzcarraldo Editions
- Seitenzahl 296
- Veröffentlichung 14.08.2025
- ISBN 9781804271391