Welcome to Utopia

Notes from a Small Town

By Valby, Karen

Publishers Summary:
Utopia, Texas: It’s either the best place on earth, or it’s no place at all. In the twenty-first century, it’s difficult to imagine any element of American life that remains untouched by popular culture, let alone an entire community existing outside the empire of pop. But Karen Valby discovered the tiny town of Utopia tucked away in the Texas Hill Country. There are no movie theaters for sixty miles in any direction, no book or music stores. But cable television and the Internet have recently thrown wide the doors of Utopia. Valby follows the lives of four Utopians—Ralph, the retired owner of the general store; Kathy, the waitress who waits in terror for three of her boys to return from war; Colter, the son of a cowboy with the soul of a hipster; and Kelli, an aspiring rock star and one of the only black people in town—as they reckon, on an intensely human scale, with war and race, class and culture, and the way time’s passage can change the ground beneath our feet. Utopia is the kind of place we still think of as the “real America,” a place of cowboys and farmers and high-school sweethearts who stay together till they die. But its dramatic stories show us what happens when the old tensions of small-town life confront a new reality: that no town, no matter how small and isolated, can escape the liberating and disruptive forces of the larger world. Welcome to Utopia is a moving elegy for a proud American way of life and a celebration of our relentless impulse toward rebirth.

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ISBN
978-0-38552-286-1
Publisher
Spiegel & Grau


REVIEWS

Library Journal

Reviewed on July 1, 2010

During extended visits over a two-year period beginning in 2006, Valby (senior writer, Entertainment Weekly) lived among the residents of the small town of Utopia, TX. She witnessed the effects of rapid changes brought about by the recent invasion of satellite TV, broadband, and Wi-Fi—forces defined by old-timers as destructive to their proud small-town culture. Young people, however, regarded the changes as liberating. Some...Log In or Sign Up to Read More

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