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The Unwanted Sound Of Everything We Want: A Book About Noise
 
 

The Unwanted Sound Of Everything We Want: A Book About Noise [Hardcover]

Garret Keizer

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: PublicAffairs (April 13 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1586485520
  • ISBN-13: 978-1586485528
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 16.8 x 3.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 612 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #244,688 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

Bill McKibben
“Garret Keizer has, not for the first time, helped us look hard at something we thought we understood and see that instead it’s rich, fascinating, full of political and moral and human implications. I’d say that his argument goes off like an intellectual explosion, but perhaps better in this context to summon the image of a bell, struck once in the silence. This is a book for our precise moment on earth.”

Naomi Klein, author of The Shock Doctrine
“Very few writers combine thoughtfulness and rage as satisfyingly as Garret Keizer. As promised, this is not just a book about noise; it is a profound meditation on power—its painful absence and its flagrant abuse. You won’t be able to hear car alarms in quite the same way again.”

Ron Powers, author of Mark Twain: A Life and co-author of Flags of Our Fathers
“Every man, woman, and child who has recoiled from the obscenity of intrusive noise should read this book. Keizer, whose disputatious moral eloquence places him in the line of Sinclair and Steinbeck, shows us that noise is far from being but one more irritant of modern life. It is a symptom of deeper threats to a healthy society: amoral power, a degraded political system, a collapse of spiritual consciousness. This is a masterpiece of social reportage and—wondrously, given all its burning indictments—of decency and affirmation.”

Booklist
“This engaging book explores the unforeseen (and sometimes unwanted) side effects of our inventive natures…. An enlightening look at an issue most of us ignore.”

Financial Times, June 5, 2010
“In this witty and informative social history, Garret Keizer employs a study of noise to interpret and illuminate a range of global issues, from racial injustice and climate change to imperialism and torture methods.”

Nature, May 2010
“Keizer is an energetic researcher and an omnivorous writer…. [He] comes across not as a dour partisan for silence but as someone who sees the right to quiet as one of many competing rights. It is a virtue of his ruminative study that it conveys the charm of a hushed library and the appeal of the ruckus outside.”

Cleveland Plain Dealer, May 10, 2010
“Keizer zaps our assumptions at a merry frequency in his remarkable, thought-provoking new work, The Unwanted Sound of Everything We Want. It is pointed, often exhilarating, and as tightly written as the skin on a drum…. Viewed through Keizer’s political lens, it is no accident that prisons are relentlessly noisy, that the poor live in the most degraded soundscapes, that the disabled, the very young and the very old are disproportionately vulnerable to noise…. Keizer writes incisively about ‘the magnificent custom bikes’ assembled yearly in Sturgis, S.D., for the ‘World’s Largest Motorcycle Rally’ and, a few pages later, the prayer gathering by Lakota trying to protect Mato Paha, or Bear Butte, S.D., from the encroaching biker rally. Keizer lets us hear the grinding of power, yes, but also the poetry of humans seeking to be heard, including our need for quiet.”

New York Times, May 18, 2010
“Shrewd…. As the effortlessly intelligent Mr. Keizer points out, noise is among the thorniest class issues of our time, and we tend to utterly ignore its meanings…. Mr. Keizer’s book is rowdy and yet … subtle. It explores the social aspects of noise in our lives, and every page is packed with crackling observations. Mr. Keizer is not antinoise. Without it, the world would lack many beautiful things — not just the music of the Rolling Stones but also certain side benefits, he writes, like ‘Keith Richards’s incomparable smile.’”

New York Times Book Review, May 30, 2010
“[Keizer] has really wrestled with the noise question and comes away with the most to say.... What kept me engaged in Keizer’s book was a succession of unexpected ideas about the links between noise, politics and technology."
 
The Guardian, June 26, 2010
"[A] thoughtfully soft-spoken and beautifully written polemic... To be read with Rage Against the Machine cranked up, but not too far, on headphones."
 
Religion Dispatches, July 9, 2010
"Garret Keizer, best known for the powerful essays he contributes to Harper's, is a passionate and pugnacious thinker with a strong aversion to concealment and cant."
 
Daily Telegraph, July 17, 2010
“Noise is a terrible problem in the modern world, and one salutes both George Prochnik and Garret Keizer for proselytizing on behalf of a bit more hush. Although they both write from the United States, the noisiest country in the world, their approaches are different and complementary… Keizer is the environmental activist, crankier and perhaps more fun.”

Book Description

Noise is usually defined as unwanted sound: loud music from a neighbor, the honk of a taxicab, the roar of a supersonic jet. But as Garret Keizer illustrates in this probing examination, noise is as much about what we want as about what we seek to avoid. It has been a byproduct of human striving since ancient times even as it has become a significant cause of disease in our own. At heart, noise provides a key for understanding some of our most pressing issues, from social inequality to climate change.

In a journey that leads us from the Tanzanian veldt to the streets of New York, Keizer deftly explores the political ramifications of noise, America’s central role in a loud world, and the environmental sustainability of a quieter one. The result is a deeply satisfying book—one guaranteed to change how we hear the world, and how we measure our own personal volume within it.


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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Amazon.com: 4.4 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)

25 of 27 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars The Converted Need Preachers Too, May 24 2010
By Kelly Cooper - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Unwanted Sound Of Everything We Want: A Book About Noise (Hardcover)
This is an excellent, thoughtful meditation on something virtually everyone can agree upon: painful and intrusive noise sucks. The politically aggressive bullying that typifies noise dominance is finally given a good lashing on these pages; which alone is gratifying enough to recommend the book. Stylistically, Garret Keizer sticks with his forte: the clever milieu of highbrow periodical wit. Perhaps the most resonant quality of the book is its ability to make the reader feel less alone in the world. Most of us tend to stoically (by our own estimation) tolerate a great deal of noise in our daily lives, convinced that the risks of confrontation outweigh the uncertain rewards of complaint. We also recognize, even if only by a tacit sense of fair play, that the rights of the noisemaker and the accidental ear overlap in uncomfortable ways. It's a rewarding experience to read through this exhaustive rumination on the subject. Even if it isn't necessarily going to make the world a quieter place, it's a good start.

There are several pages of notes the end of the book, adding substantially to its bulk. An electronic version or the paperback edition would probably be the more economical - and ecologically prudent - choice.

16 of 18 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars An important book, May 15 2010
By waitingtoderail "waitingtoderail" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Unwanted Sound Of Everything We Want: A Book About Noise (Hardcover)
This review is based on an advance reading copy.

Garret Keizer has written an important book. I don't mean it's particularly well-written - I think it could have been about thirty pages shorter. No, what I mean is, he's given some voice to those who, by the very nature of their cause, can't and won't be loud about it without appearing hypocritical.

Noise is a "weak" issue, Keizer says, because it affects mainly the weak. True, we can't all afford to build soundproofed rooms like one wealthy writer did, as described in the book. But I say it's a weak issue because people aren't clamoring to complain to officials and making it known that this is an issue they will vote on. People have to make a little noise to reduce it.

Keizer does a good job in describing the history of "noise" (as opposed to sound), and even touches a bit on how one person's noise is another person's pleasant sound when describing the "battle" between Sturgis bikers and Native Americans and with a few community members in Massachusetts versus the larger community's desire to hold a festival complete with music. I was glad to see that.

I appreciated the timeline of noise history, glossary, and list of organizations that do try to get noise reduced. He also gives a "personal noise code" which I felt was a little much. Suggestions for how to reduce noise are appreciated, but couching it in the guise of personal affirmations rubbed me the wrong way.

A thorough bibliography is included, and although the advanced reading copy didn't include one, the publisher assures us there will be an index.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent work, Aug 19 2010
By Anonymous "booksandcookies" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Unwanted Sound Of Everything We Want: A Book About Noise (Hardcover)
The subject is very important to me and one not often discussed intelligently; discussion too often degenerates into defensive posturing. The subject should be very important to everyone, in my opinion. I heard this author interviewed on the University of Illinois' public radio station with host David Inge, an excellent interview, and was struck by the level of articulate, even eloquent, discussion on this topic. I own the book and am buying another copy. One other reviewer described it as a "thoughtful meditation" and I think that is a good description. It is also informed and informative, wise, philosophical, scientific, interesting, and useful. Highly recommend.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 8 reviews  4.4 out of 5 stars 

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