Bub: Essays from Just North of Nashville


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Description

Nashville native Drew Bratcher writes musically about memory and memorably about music in uncommonly beautiful essays that announce the arrival of a major new voice. The title essay, a requiem in fragments, tells the story of a grandfather through his ear, comb, hands, El Camino, and clothes. Bratcher delivers a tough and moving tribute to a man who "went on ahead, on up the road, and then the road turned." Elsewhere, Bratcher directs his attention to Johnny Cash's looming presence over his childhood, the relative pain of red paper wasp stings, Dolly Parton's generative homesickness, the humiliations and consolations of becoming a new father, the experience of hearing his name in a Taylor Swift song, and the mystifying hymns treasured by both his great grandmother and D. H. Lawrence.

Seamlessly blending memoir and arts criticism and aiming at both the heart and the head, this is a book about listening closely to stories and songs, about leaving home in order to find home, and about how the melodies and memories absorbed along the way become "a living music that advances and prevails upon us at formative moments, corralling chaos into the simple, liberating stockade of verse, chorus, verse."


Author: Drew Bratcher
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Published: 11/02/2022
Pages: 190
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.55lbs
Size: 8.10h x 5.60w x 1.10d
ISBN13: 9781609388492
ISBN10: 1609388496
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Music
- Music | Essays

About the Author
Drew Bratcher's essays and journalism have appeared in Oxford American, Los Angeles Review of Books, Paris Review, Nowhere Magazine, Garden & Gun, Image Journal, and Washingtonian. He lives in Chicagoland.