For nearly ten years John Griswold has been publishing his
essays in "Inside Higher Ed," "McSweeney's Internet Tendency,"
"Brevity," "Ninth Letter," and "Adjunct Advocate," many under the
pen name Oronte Churm. Churm's topics have ranged widely, exploring
themes such as the writing life and the utility of creative-writing
classes, race issues in a university town, and the beautiful,
protective crocodiles that lie patiently waiting in the minds of
fathers.
Though Griswold recently entered the tenure stream, much of his
experience, at a Big Ten university, has been as an adjunct
lecturer--that tenuous and uncertain position so many now occupy in
higher education. In "Pirates You Don't Know," Griswold writes
poignantly and hilariously about the contingent nature of this
life, tying it to his birth in the last American enclave in Saigon
during the Vietnam War, his upbringing in a coal town in southern
Illinois, and his experience as an army deep-sea diver and frogman.
He investigates class in America through four generations of his
family and portrays the continuing joys and challenges of
fatherhood while making a living, becoming literate, and staying
open to the world. But Griswold's central concerns apply to
everyone: What does it mean to be educated? What does it mean to
think, feel, create, and be whole? What is the point of this
particular journey?
"Pirates You Don't Know" is Griswold's vital attempt at making
sense of his life as a writer and now professor. The answers for
him are both comic and profound: "Picture Long John Silver at the
end of the movie, his dory filled with stolen gold, rowing and
sinking; rowing, sinking, and gloating."
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