Hurry - Only 2 left in stock!
|
An unlikely journalist, a Mississippi murder plagued by revelations, and a fascinating true-crime story of race, money, sex, and power in the modern American South - all told in the sharply original style of Louis Theroux and Jon Ronson.
John Safran is an award-winning documentary-maker of provocative and hilarious takes on race, the media, religion and other issues. Both John Safran's Music Jamboree (2002) and John Safran vs. God (2004) won Australian Film Industry awards for Best Comedy Series and Most Original Concept, and were also nominated for Logie Awards. Other shows include John Safran's Race Relations (2009) which was nominated for two awards at the prestigious Rose d'Or Festival in Switzerland and Speaking in Tongues (2005-06). John currently co-hosts Sunday Night Safran, a radio talk in Australia.
Funny and gripping and wonderfully weird . . . It's a tremendous
book. I can't praise it too highly
*Louis Theroux*
A hilarious and bizarre story that leads where you least expect it.
John Safran has for years been one of my favourite journalists -
forever pushing the boundaries, funny, startling, a hurricane
*Jon Ronson, author of The Men Who Stare at Goats and The
Psychopath Test*
Stunning
*Men's Style*
A winning combination of memoir, true crime and gonzo journalism .
. . a compulsive summer read
*Sunday Mail*
One of the best pieces of sustained, rigorous journalism I've read
in twenty years. It is absolutely magnificent - smart, and wry, and
emotional too
*Caroline Overington*
Witty, insightful, compelling - In Cold Blood for our
generation
*Eddie Perfect*
The elegance of this book is that its axis is a resounding
'perhaps' . . . It is this moral ambivalence that draws readers to
the true crime genre, and Safran nails it
*Weekend Australian*
[Safran] has written a marvellous book which I cannot put down
*Melbourne Observer*
Mississippi is like a trampoline for [Safran's] eccentricities. But
the form and content of the story bring out an unfamiliar side of
him
*Sydney Morning Herald*
John Safran's captivating inquiry into a murder in darkest
Mississippi is by turns informative, frightening and hilarious. It
is enlivened by a swarm of creepy locals and a torrent of
astonishing details--such as hedge clippers put to surgical use in
the performance of an official autopsy
*John Berendt, author of Midnight in the Garden of Good and
Evil*
'Murder in Mississippi is a page turner'
*The Times*
Weaving a tale that is simultaneously about race, failed systems,
money, sex, family and simple rage, Safran truly did lose a year in
Mississippi, and getting lost with him is a joy
*Kirkus reviews*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |