Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Notes from No Man's Land

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Originally published
  
3 February 2009

4.2/5
Goodreads

Author
  
Eula Biss

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Awards
  
National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism

Similar
  
National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism winners, Social group books

Notes From No Man's Land is a 2009 book of essays by Eula Biss. The book won the 2008 Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism.

The book deals with issues of race in America, and in particular, Biss often explores what it means to be a white woman in predominantly black spaces, the issue of white privilege, and the inherited, deeply ingrained racism of American culture. The first essay in the collection, "Time and Distance Overcome," is a lyric essay that juxtaposes the history of telephone poles and the history of lynching into a stunning exploration of American history. Another essay, "Goodbye to All That", is a retelling of/response to Joan Didion's essay of the same name, reflecting on Biss's experiences living in New York City.

Contents

  • Time and Distance Overcome
  • Relations
  • Three Songs of Salvage
  • Land Mines
  • Goodbye to All That
  • Black News
  • Letter to Mexico
  • Babylon
  • Back to Buxton
  • Is This Kansas
  • No Man's Land
  • Nobody Knows Your Name
  • All Apologies
  • References

    Notes from No Man's Land Wikipedia