The Golden Door : Letters to America book cover
Witty American Observations

The Golden Door : Letters to America

by Adrian Gill

Publisher: Orion Publishing Co

Paperback ISBN: 9780753829165 2 May 2013 198 x 132 x 20 (mm) 246g

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Britain's most readable journalist takes on his biggest challenge - America.

Where were you when John F. Kennedy was shot? Today the answer more often than not is going to be 'not born'. A generation later, you could ask the same question about the World Trade Centre. Where were you when the plane hit the twin towers on 11 September 2001? This book is about what happened between those two moments, and how the world's perception of America changed between those two waves.

A.A. Gill's book is about the things he's always found admirable and optimistic about the United States and its citizens. Two of the happiest times of his life were spent living in New York and the mountains of Kentucky - the contrast between the two couldn't have been more complicated and different. The America he found was contradictory and elusive, not the simpletons' place he'd been led to believe. It was still a list of raw ingredients rather than the old stew of Europe.

Now A.A. Gill takes another look at the America he knew in the 1970s, a place that seemed to hold promise, practical energy and a plan for the future. How did it become the political magnetic north, against which the liberal intellectuals from the rest of the world set their opinions? Why is it so easily mocked, so comprehensively blamed, so thoughtlessly hated? This collection of linked essays is based around places that open up truths and mythologies about America and Americans, searching for 'the home of' everything - because every other small town in America boasts on its Welcome sign that it is the home of something or other: a mountain, a mine, peaches, spotted pigs, a president, the world's biggest ball of string, barbecues, the deepest hole.