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Press and Reviews


Photo by Corine Vermeulen

Novelist and Rolling Stone contributing editor Binelli's first nonfiction book is a nuanced portrait of a once-great American industrial city that decades ago fell into decay, but which is, as of late, experiencing a ray of hope.

As fascinating as Detroit's current, tentative renaissance is, Binelli masterfully provides a broader story, a 300-year tour through the formerly wondrous and now wondrously devastated metropolis. A child of suburban Detroit, Binelli (Sacco and Vinzetti MustDie!) astonishes with spot-on research, fluid prose, and a discerning eye for the peculiar, including reports of early French frontiersmen and late ‘60s rock revolutionaries, the MC5. The author immersed himself in Motor City culture while writing the volume. From Henry Ford's auto and steel boom and the race riots of the 1960s and early ‘70s to the dark ages of widespread crack addiction and the current resurgence led by enterprising idealists, urban farmers, and DIY go-getters, Binelli offers a wildly compelling biography of a city as well as a profound commentary on postindustrial America. Publishers Weekly (Starred review)

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Press and Reviews

One of Publishers Weekly's Top 10 books of 2012

“First things first: Binelli can really write....A winning combination of humor, skepticism, and sincerity.” The New York Times Book Review

“A sharply observed, insightful work of love and fury.” The Christian Science Monitor

“Heartbreaking…Darkly funny and prophetic.” Rolling Stone

“Magnificent...A crackling rebuttal to ruin porn, those glossy coffee table books that fetishize Detroit's decay…A clear-eyed look at promising recent developments, without any saccharine optimism.” The New York Times

“The single best thing to read if you want to understand what Detroit feels like today.” San Francisco Chronicle

“Binelli is excellent writer and a sensitive and careful reporter.…He does a great job of presenting the arc of Detroit's 20th century: its rise as automotive capital of the world, its economic apex in the 1950s and its thudding diminishment.” The Wall Street Journal

“I can't think of a better work of nonfiction in 2012 than Mark Binelli's Detroit City Is the Place to Be....Nothing has come as close to realistically documenting the wackiness of contemporary Detroit.” The New York Observer

“Excellent… A stylish, clear-eyed, subtly absurdist panorama... Binelli’s engrossing book captures the beauty and nobility of Detroit, and the warmth of its communal life amid hardship and chaos. Binelli also takes full measure of the bizarreness of Detroit’s predicament—which is also the bizarreness of a whole nation contemptuously disregarding its achievements.” Bookforum

“Mark Binelli's Detroit City Is the Place to Be is part history, part explanation and part profile of a city he knows intimately--he grew up in the Detroit area. Sounds complex? It is, and it should be. The city doesn't need any more labels or quick summaries. It needs someone to put a face on Detroit, to show that it's not rolling over and playing dead. Binelli proves he's up to the task in this refreshing, intriguing work.” BookPage

“Terrific…A long-overdue and hugely welcome corrective to the one-dimensional narrative of urban decay that has been spewing out of Detroit roughly since 1970…Binelli is equally skeptical of breathless hype and received wisdom, and he can also be very funny.” The Millions

“Binelli went to Detroit and lived there. Does that sound boring? It's not.…Binelli is a good storyteller, an entertaining historian, and an insightful commenter.” Slate

“Remember that trend of major newspapers publishing slideshows of decaying Detroit?…Detroit City Is the Place to Be doesn't shy away from these unflattering realities, but it is a far more thoughtful exploration of what it means to be a fallen city. In a sense, it is the antithesis of those lazy slideshows…An impressive portrait of the city, balancing gumshoe research and interviews, some brisk but thorough history, and a nice dose of personal narrative.” Grantland

“As fascinating as Detroit's current, tentative renaissance is, Binelli masterfully provides a broader story, a 300-year tour through the formerly wondrous and now wondrously devastated metropolis....A wildly compelling biography of a city as well as a profound commentary on postindustrial America.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)

 

“Binelli is a charming writer, and his periodic humorous asides and innate good nature are a welcome contrast to the darker sections.…An informative, often-heartbreaking portrait of a once-great American metropolis gone to hell.” Kirkus Reviews

“I like Mark Binelli's book a lot. He covers the shrinking of Detroit, its downfall from the lofty peak as Arsenal of Democracy, with clear, expository prose and no axe to grind. A firefighter asks the author, ‘You going fiction or non-fiction?' Binelli answers, ‘Non.' And the reply comes back, ‘No one's going to believe it.'?” —Elmore Leonard

“With the acuity of Joan Didion and the controlled hilarity of Ian Frazier, Mark Binelli investigates the portents and absurdities of America's most infamous urban calamity. Exhilarating in scope, irresistible for its intricate, scrupulous portraiture, Detroit City Is the Place to Be is the masterful performance of one of our generation's most humane and brilliant writers.” —Wells Tower, author of Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned

“Let's face it. Detroit City is not the place to be. But if you care about America you have to see it, to walk its desolate streets, to talk to the people who make it their home, to hear what it means to live on the wrong side of the post-industrial divide. And you're not going to find a smarter, tougher, more entertaining guide than Mark Binelli. If you give a damn you've got to read this book.” —Kevin Boyle, author of Arc of Justice: A Saga of Race, Civil Rights and Murder in the Jazz Age

“At once hilarious and sharp, sweeping and intimate, Detroit City Is the Place to Be is an oddly delighted warning from the recent future. Mark Binelli writes with the tender scrutiny of a returning exile, in a style that manages to infuse Rolling Stone vigor with Spy wit, Baffler skepticism, and n+1 intelligence. This is a nonfiction novel about our American experiment--grand and grandiose, unprecedented and absurd--and it's the most entertaining and persuasive book about this country I've read in a very long time.” —Gideon Lewis-Kraus, author of A Sense of Direction: Pilgrimage for the Restless and Hopeless

“Mark Binelli has succeeded in synthesizing both the tragedy and absurdity that Detroiters face each and every day in America's fastest shrinking city. Yes, things are dire in Motor City, but the author refuses to perform an autopsy on a place that still radiates rage, pride, hustle, and hope. Detroit, he discovers, is very much alive.” —Heidi Ewing, director of Detropia

“Before turning the buffalo (or the artists) loose on the haunted prairie that was once Detroit, we should ponder why a great American metropolis was allowed to die. Mark Binelli, Motor City native returned, provides a picaresque but unflinchingly honest look at the crime scene. Like Richard Pryor, he has the rare talent to make you laugh and cry at the same time.” —Mike Davis, author of Ecology of Fear

“Mark Binelli is a first-rate reporter, gifted with the ability to get almost anybody to open up. Detroit City Is the Place to Be is searching, wide-angle, honest, deeply moving, and unshakably dark. It is a vivid slice of our time and implies a disquieting prophecy of the future.” —Luc Sante, author of Low Life: Lures and Snares of Old New York

Detroit City Is the Place to Be is a brilliant kaleidoscope of everything that is great, broken, inspiring, heart-breaking, and ultimately remarkable about Detroit. This is a portrait of a city unlike anything you've read--funny, profoundly intimate, with characters who lodge themselves into your heart and mind. Mark Binelli has turned the story of Detroit, and by extension America, into a glorious, unforgettable work of art.” —Dinaw Mengestu, author of How to Read the Air