Paul Kingsnorth is the author of Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist, Beast and The Wake, which was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize. He is cofounder of the Dark Mountain Project, a global network of writers, artists, and thinkers in search of new stories for a world on the brink.
"Savage Gods is a beautiful, intelligent, extremely
poetic book about a writer dissecting his thoughts and feelings on
the page without the protective layer of fiction."
--Gabino Iglesias, NPR"Like all the best books,
[Savage Gods is] a wail sent up from the heart of one of
the intractable problems of the human condition: real change comes
only from crisis, and crisis always involves loss... There are few
writers as raw or brave on the page. Savage Gods is an
important book."
--Ellie Robins, Los Angeles Review of
Books"Paul Kingsnorth's vision is both so compelling
and so completely one-of-a-kind... Savage Gods [is]
something of a throwback to the romantic cultures of a pre-modern
world, and a lesson in what happens when those old gods are exhumed
in an age when Nature becomes slave to Man, when customs give way
to chaos, and the words we use to make sense of it all have lost
their meanings."
--Josh Allan, Full Stop"The most
incredible book I read this year was Paul Kingsnorth's Savage
Gods, a dramatic self-accounting that explodes 'nature
writing' to strain at the limits of language itself. Kingsnorth
charts the breakdown of his faith in words, in nature as an
uncomplicated restorative, in the idea of 'progress', while
fearlessly tracking his conclusions to their very ends. This is a
writer--and a writer that burns--attempting to cure himself of
writing, on the page, and it leads to some profound, and just as
often jaw-dropping, insights."
--David Keenan, The Guardian "The best books of
2019""This profound meditation on words--and worlds--isn't
just for writers.... Kingsnorth delivers a refreshing reminder
about how little we know about what we think we know."
--Jack McCarthy, Washington Independent Review of
Books"Paul Kingsnorth's Savage Gods sings
with introspective urgency, transcending plot and narrative to get
at the heart of the questions he considers truly important: what's
the usefulness of writing and language? Why exist, communicate,
connect? And how can we ground ourselves in a shifting, uncertain
world?"
--Victoria Hudson, Arkansas
International"My nonfiction book of the year is Paul
Kingsnorth's Savage Gods, a meditative memoir on writing's
inability to ever capture life and the enduring struggle of
displacement."
--Nora, Three Lives and Company
Booksellers"Savage Gods is the story of what
happens when a writer's tools finally fail him, even betray
him."
--Josh Allan, Atticus Review"How often do
we get an environmental activist and poet--who once worked
undercover in West Papua New Guinea, who has been cited by figures
as diverse as David Cameron and Mark Rylance, and who believes
'[s]ocial media is like a giant communal toilet'--confronting the
failure of language and civilization in 142 pages?"
--Molly Young, Vulture "The Best and Biggest Books to
Read This Fall" (Fall Preview 2019)"What can nature teach us about
ourselves? For English writer Paul Kingsnorth, moving his family to
a small farm in Ireland illuminated a sense of disconnection. He
wrestles with language, land and rootlessness in Savage
Gods."
--Laura Pearson, Chicago Tribune "Fall literary
preview: 28 books you need to read now""A furiously gifted
writer."
--The Washington Post"Kingsnorth's is a voice worth listening
to."
--Kirkus Reviews"Kingsnorth wrote his brilliant first
novel, The Wake, in a language he created. This book
provides a startling and instructive account of an uncommonly
creative consciousness in a state of profound doubt."
--John G. Matthews, Library Journal"What
ultimately makes Savage Gods a success is Kingsnorth's
passion. His honest probing of himself is the real strength of this
book. He is a man bearing everything. And for all the confessional
memoirs so popular at the moment, this is the real deal."
--Scott Beauchamp, The American
Conservative
"Savage Gods is a compromise of a book, too,
veering between inner and outer worlds, shape-shifting from
narrative to aphorism to vision. But tidiness is indisposed to
containing multitudes, and there's a price to pay in retaining
them. Kingsnorth's troublesome words do an unexpectedly moving job
of capturing the problem of being, and of writing about it."
--Nina Lyon, The
Spectator"What is a home? And what happens when old
patterns of life break down? In his new book... Kingsnorth wrestles
with these questions. Contemporary threats to nature, he argues,
are indicative of a deeper problem: the crisis of culture and
language in the West."
--The Commonweal Podcast, Ep. 22: in conversation
with Anthony Domestico"Kingsnorth grapples with his
inabilities as a writer and the impossibility of ever truly feeling
at home. Unlike anything I have read. Raw, and true, and
perceptive." --Nora, Three Lives and Company Booksellers,
newsletter (New York, NY)"Paul Kingsnorth is an acclaimed
writer... His books bristle with an awareness of place and history,
and so it's not hugely surprising that his latest book, Savage
Gods, is about his own embrace of a more rural existence....
Kingsnorth's isolation prompts a crisis of confidence in his own
abilities as a writer."
--Tobias Carroll, InsideHook "What Happens When
Living in Isolation Goes Wrong?""Savage Gods is,
in some ways, an earnest attempt to tell the truth about why we
write. But it is much more than that ... [it is] a meditation on
the peculiar homelessness of our age, adrift as we are from any
real connection to nature and landscape. In this way, Savage
Gods is a deeply personal memoir of the ecology of home and an
unusual and frank account of a writer's experience."
--Melanie Challenger, author of On
Extinction"Horrible and brilliant and terribly
important. This book is what I've been looking for for years, and
what I'd hoped never to see."
--Charles Foster, author of Being A
Beast"A poignant, honest portrait of a crisis of
faith, not in God or Self but a far rarer thing, a crisis of belief
in words themselves, the very materials of the writer's mind."
--Jay Griffiths, author of
Wild"Paul Kingsnorth's books have such a profound
affect on me that I always feel I must make them into a play or a
film or something after reading them. In a world of such confusing
news and opinion, I always find a story in Paul's writing that
leads me to an authentic place in the world."
--Mark Rylance"Kingsnorth is becoming an existential David
Mitchell."
--Boris Kachka, Vulture"Paul Kingsnorth has always
held my attention, and at times completely astounded me with his
varied and vital writing talent. This spectacular little volume is
a book all about that writing talent, but discussions of process
and craft are secondary to a more ontological exploration of what
writing really is... and what it very much isn't. We see the art
form through Kingsnorth's personal prism, and he slowly invites us
in to ponder both the freedom and stricture that come with the
endeavor to turn human language into the written word."
--Mark Schultz, Carmichael's Bookstore (Louisville,
Kentucky)"A sprawling meditation stuffed to the gills with
poetry and literature. Kingsnorth looks at the decisions that made
his life, roads taken and not. 'If not writing, then what?' he
asks. Then what, indeed. All I can say is that I'm glad Kingsnorth
has answered with this lovely book, full of wisdom."
--Spencer Ruchti, Harvard Bookstore (Cambridge,
Massachusetts)"An enigma of a book, Savage Gods
takes a long hard look at the creative process of writing as well
as deep, philosophical questions of purpose, place, and belonging.
Kingsnorth wrestles with his prose and the whole idea of attaching
words to lived experiences; questioning his choices and impulses at
every turn. Purposefully meandering, deeply personal, and playfully
existential, Savage Gods asks page after page, "What the
hell is the point of all of this?" Kingsnorth doesn't provide easy
answers, but he has written an essential companion to anyone who
creates or takes pen to paper. A unique, bleak and yet uplifting
work; honest in a way few books ever are."
--Caleb Masters, Bookmarks (Winston-Salem, North
Carolina)"Paul Kingsnorth is one of my favorite writers
and thinkers out there today. In Savage Gods, his deeply
personal musings on writing and its value (or even relevance) in
the face of global and environmental crises are heartfelt and
thought-provoking. He puts on the page concerns I have found myself
facing regularly with my own work--why even bother? The manner in
which he delivers these thoughts in the book, very straightforward,
and clearly present and not over-written, are honest and heartfelt.
I read the electronic ARC of this one, and can't wait to get my
hands on a finished, physical copy to keep close for future
returns-to. Maybe what we do as writers is just tossing deck chairs
off the Titanic, as the saying goes, but I hope Kingsnorth doesn't
stop."
--Chris La Tray, Fact & Fiction Bookstore (Missoula,
Montana)"A memoir-esque exploration of the relationship
between writing, language, and place."
--Janice Pariat, The Hindu Business
Line
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