 | Pop culture guru Chuck Klosterman comes as close to a magnum opus as he is likely to compose with this collection of essays which chart the ethereal distances between present events and our media-guided memory of them. Klosterman name-drops an... |
 | Chuck Klosterman's series of essays on pop culture's interaction with real life is an exploration of our obsession with celebrity, what drives it, and how the frequently the lines between entertainment and reality become blurred. It's also an... |
 | Quite the best book on heavy metal ever to come out of Fargo, North Dakota, FARGO ROCK CITY, Chuck Klostermann's extended meditation on growing up in that rock-forsaken town and finding his salvation through his brother's (admittedly awesome) Motley... |
 | For 6,557 miles, Chuck Klosterman thought about dying. He drove a rental car from New York to Rhode Island to Georgia to Mississippi to Iowa to Minneapolis to Fargo to Seattle, and he chased death and rock 'n' roll all the way. Within the span of... |
 | Rock and pop-culture critic Chuck Klosterman returns with another collection of previously published essays and articles. Each piece madly probe the delights and murky depths of our mediated reality. Among other things, Klosterman interviews Britney... |
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 | Chuck Klosterman is known for his keen analysis of popular culture, and he brings both his wit and his love of Americana to his debut novel, set in the small town of Owl, North Dakota, in the year 1983. Though mostly a plotless ramble, Klosterman's... |
 | Chuck Klosterman is known for his keen analysis of popular culture, and he brings both his wit and his love of Americana to his debut novel, set in the small town of Owl, North Dakota, in the year 1983. Though mostly a plotless ramble, Klosterman's... |
 | Chuck Klosterman is known for his keen analysis of popular culture, and he brings both his wit and his love of Americana to his debut novel, set in the small town of Owl, North Dakota, in the year 1983. Though mostly a plotless ramble, Klosterman's... |
 | Dave Eggers gathers a second collection of what he considers to be the best writing of the year. Contributors include David Drury, Judy Budnitz, Daniel Voll, David Sedaris--and Lynda Barry with a story in comic-book form. |