In this compelling book, Robert Coles, the celebrated Harvard
professor and Pulitzer Prize–winning author, turns his attention to
popular music legend Bruce Springsteen, and to the powerful impact
Springsteen’s work has had both on the lives of his audience and on
this country’s literary tradition. Coles places Springsteen in the
pantheon of American artists—Walt Whitman, William Carlos Williams,
Dorothea Lange, and Walker Percy, among others—who understood and
were inspired by their “traveling companions in time,” the ordinary
people of their eras.
With wisdom and a unique personal perspective, Coles explores
Springsteen’s words as contemporary American poetry, and offers
firsthand accounts of how people interact with them: A trucker
listens to “Blinded by the Light” during long, lonely nights and
reminisces about his mother; a schoolteacher is astonished when a
usually silent student offers a comparison between “Nebraska” and
Conrad’s Heart of Darkness; a policeman responds to “American Skin
(41 Shots),” reflecting on his own role in his family and
community. As these people, and others, candidly discuss the
meaning Springsteen’s words have in their lives, Coles listens and,
with the special insight and compassion that are the trademarks of
his art, sheds new light on “The Boss,” removing the legendary
American rock musician from fan-filled stadiums and placing the
poet in a greater social, cultural, and philosophical context.
Coles sees Springsteen as a representative of a uniquely American
documentary tradition—as a sing-ing and traveling poet who does not
simply embody the culture of which he is a part but fully engages
it, interacting with its people and creating a conversation that
has helped to shape a distinct way of looking at, and living,
American life today.
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