The Devil Never Sleeps

and Other Essays

Fiction & Literature, Essays & Letters, Essays
Cover of the book The Devil Never Sleeps by Andrei Codrescu, St. Martin's Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Andrei Codrescu ISBN: 9780312273811
Publisher: St. Martin's Press Publication: April 1, 2000
Imprint: St. Martin's Press Language: English
Author: Andrei Codrescu
ISBN: 9780312273811
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Publication: April 1, 2000
Imprint: St. Martin's Press
Language: English

The Devil is alive and well and living in America, Andrei Codrescu tells us, and with good reason. Nowhere else in the world--not even in Codrescu's native Transylvania--is he taken quite as seriously. When Codrescu gently derided the fundamentalist Christian belief in Rapture ("a pre-apocalyptic event during which all true believers would be suctioned off to heaven in a single woosh") in one of his commentaries on National Public, NPR received forty thousand letters in a protest spearheaded by Ralph Reed of the Christian Coalition. Codrescu was warned to "stay away from eschatology."

Thankfully for us, he hasn't. In The Devil Never Sleeps, one of America's shrewdest social critics sets out to uncover the Devil's most modern and insidiously banal incarnations. Once easily recognizable by his horns, tail, and propensity for plague, today's Devil has become embedded in every fiber of our culture. Discussing everything from rock 'n' roll to William Burroughs to New Orleans bars to the Demon of Prosperity, Codrescu mockingly unmasks Old Nick as the opportunistic technocrat he really is. Embracing cell phones, cable access, and cyberspace, the ubiquitous Devil of secular culture embodies the true evil facing us today--banality.

In a world teeming with distractions, we are still more than capable of being bored to death. Tormented as much by insomnia and its ravages as the Devil (perhaps they are one and the same), we've become as twenty-four-hour society, swinging desperately between tedium and terror and sleeping fitfully, if at all. As Codrescu points out, the Devil never sleeps because we just won't let him.

With his characteristic charm and playful exuberance, Andrei Codrescu has successfully teased the Devil out from the darkest recesses and comic excesses of the human experience. The Devil Never Sleeps is his most wonderfully perverse book yet.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The Devil is alive and well and living in America, Andrei Codrescu tells us, and with good reason. Nowhere else in the world--not even in Codrescu's native Transylvania--is he taken quite as seriously. When Codrescu gently derided the fundamentalist Christian belief in Rapture ("a pre-apocalyptic event during which all true believers would be suctioned off to heaven in a single woosh") in one of his commentaries on National Public, NPR received forty thousand letters in a protest spearheaded by Ralph Reed of the Christian Coalition. Codrescu was warned to "stay away from eschatology."

Thankfully for us, he hasn't. In The Devil Never Sleeps, one of America's shrewdest social critics sets out to uncover the Devil's most modern and insidiously banal incarnations. Once easily recognizable by his horns, tail, and propensity for plague, today's Devil has become embedded in every fiber of our culture. Discussing everything from rock 'n' roll to William Burroughs to New Orleans bars to the Demon of Prosperity, Codrescu mockingly unmasks Old Nick as the opportunistic technocrat he really is. Embracing cell phones, cable access, and cyberspace, the ubiquitous Devil of secular culture embodies the true evil facing us today--banality.

In a world teeming with distractions, we are still more than capable of being bored to death. Tormented as much by insomnia and its ravages as the Devil (perhaps they are one and the same), we've become as twenty-four-hour society, swinging desperately between tedium and terror and sleeping fitfully, if at all. As Codrescu points out, the Devil never sleeps because we just won't let him.

With his characteristic charm and playful exuberance, Andrei Codrescu has successfully teased the Devil out from the darkest recesses and comic excesses of the human experience. The Devil Never Sleeps is his most wonderfully perverse book yet.

More books from St. Martin's Press

Cover of the book Loving Amy by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Four Mothers by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Goddess of Vengeance by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Agatha Raisin and the Wellspring of Death by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Bound by Blood by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Cuba/Hong Kong by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Killer Secrets by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book American Statecraft by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Justice for Sara by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Skin and Bone by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book We Just Want To Live Here by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Real Men Do It Better by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book The Perils of "Privilege" by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book Homemade Fun by Andrei Codrescu
Cover of the book And the Band Played On by Andrei Codrescu
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy