A University of Michigan lecturer offers a meditation on Midwestern identity and the future of the region in the age of climate change and a troubled economy.
What The Reviewers Say
Megan Marz,
The Washington Post
Political and economic history gives way to analyses of books and movies, which give way to Christman’s personal reflections on life in Michigan, where he lives. You could describe the form as disparate things in similar containers that together create a larger whole, which is pretty close to the way Christman describes his fellow Midwesterners. Thus does the book, like some concrete poetry, take a shape that conveys what it also puts into words.
Grace Ebert,
Chicago Review of Books
Midwesterners, Christman argues, are seen as average.
Cleveland Review of Books
...an engrossing meatloaf of a text comprised, among other things, of a tour of land-use policy in the Midwest, a discussion and critique of literary representations of Midwestern loneliness, and an investigation of the region’s troubled history with race.
Repps Hudson,
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
The Midwest is not merely flyover country, as Phil Christman shows with Midwest Futures, a collection of essays and observations that disputes that hackneyed phrase used by bicoastal elites.