Details

Synopsis This portrait, which grew from a profile published in GQ, studies the life of mountain-man Eustace Conway, who upon running away from his family, pursued a survivalist lifestyle in the North Carolina woods--and flourished. A New York Times Notable Book for 2002.
| Size | | Length: | 271 pages | | Height: | 9.3 in | | Width: | 6.3 in | | Thickness: | 1.0 in | | Weight: | 19.2 oz |
Industry Reviews "...Gilbert delivers a first-rate work of reportage." Kirkus Reviews (03/01/2002)
"Gilbert has a jaunty, breathless style, and she paints a complicated portrait of American maleness that is as original as it is surprising." Publishers Weekly (04/22/2002)
"[A] wickedly well-written and finally pain-filled biography...." New York Times Book Review - James Gorman (06/02/2002)
"THE LAST AMERICAN MAN is a vigorous, engaging book...." New York Times - Janet Maslin (06/03/2002)
"[THE LAST AMERICAN MAN] is a tremendously witty, insightful, and disturbing portrait of a contemporary mountain man and the society that needs such heroes....With affection, humour and respect, Gilbert reveals the ultimate authoritarianism of this myth [of the American frontier] and the man that it made." (06/19/2009)
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