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The Last American Man

The Last American Man

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $29.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Lies and Bad Writing
Review: I can't believe how many people gave this book five stars. The writer repeats Conway's self-glorifying tales without any attempt to establish their accuracy. She is not a writer, she is a publicist, for Conway's grandiose vision of himself. She doesn't see that he: 1)exploits naive young people to work like dogs improving HIS land, then complains that they don't have the 'guts' to stick around when they wake up and see what he is up to 2)exploits women to be the mirror of his conceit 3)blames his Dad for all his problems, which is the the acme of self pity 4) uses his own brother and the writer to further his ambition of land ownership and celebrity

this is a badly written book about a sick man.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thought-provoking
Review: This book, like the person that it's about, is much more complicated than one might initially imagine. Gilbert gives the reader a wonderfully detailed snapshot of a man whose visions are driven not only by his intelligence and will, but also by a multitude of demons. The author also asks us to consider why we so romanticize the ideal of an American man and whether we can accept the reality behind the fantasy. It's a thought-provoking book that is affecting on many levels -- and I don't think you have to be a nature-lover or outdoorsperson to learn lessons from this story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Davy Crockett makes a lousy husband
Review: Eustace Conway is handsome, brilliant, charismatic. He owns his own valley in North Carolina. He's a trendsetter and a newsmaker. He even has a conscience. So why can't he keep a girlfriend? You'll find out in Elizabeth Gilbert's The Last American Man, an intriguing profile of the 21st century's answer to Davy Crockett.

Frontiers aren't for everyone, though they linger in America's collective imagination. Boys these days are more likely to test their manhood in a mall than in the woods. Into this rather sad picture of diminished horizons enters Eustace Conway. Conway leaves his comfortable suburban home at 17 and disappears into the woods, only to reappear as a sort of eco-Messiah, with a message that yes, there is a better way to live than on the grid prescribed by modern-day America.

Soon Conway is hiking the Appalachian Trail, crossing the United States on horseback and buying up unspoiled land in North Carolina to establish his utopian Turtle Island, a sanctuary where visitors and apprentices can study Conway's alternative lifestyle-one that's closely based on Native American traditions of hunting, gathering and the resourceful use of natural materials.

The word "biography" has such a dusty sound to it that I hesitate to apply it to this book. Gilbert does, indeed, chronicle Conway's life from beginning to end, but her account is more than fact; it's great entertainment. Gilbert is a gifted storyteller. She also has the perfect subject: a 21st century pioneer with the wanderlust of Deerslayer and the shrewdness of Daniel Boone.

Through Conway, Gilbert examines the difficulty of coming into an American manhood in a world without frontiers. While she's at it, she chronicles the history of utopias in America-both those that succeeded and those that failed. Gilbert doesn't mince Conway's shortcomings-a difficult relationship with his father; an inflexibility that makes lasting relationships with women impossible; his phenomenal workaholism; his Messianic complex. Even Conway's flaws are part of the picture-Gilbert's portrait of an American man of destiny, perhaps the last.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Read Thoreau...
Review: I heard about The Last American Man on NPR - and picked up the paperback last week in an airport somewhere. I have always been thoughtful of and concerned about modern humanity's plight of increased technology and decreased humanity. Coupled with our Post-Modern Relativism, we are fast becoming what Lewis called "men without chests". When I heard of Eustace Conway, I was intrigued that perhaps he was on to something. Perhaps the very nature of technological advancement and dependency breeds this flaccid kind of existence. So I read The Last American Man with both fear and hope. Fear that Eustace Conway's opinion of modern man would be correct and that I would have to entertain the possibility that the proper response would mean giving up a comfortable suburban life. Hopeful that there would be an answer to our current crisis. And while I recommend reading this book - both because it reminds us of what Whitman and Thoreau told us a hundred and fifty years ago and because Eustace Conway's story is a compelling and utterly human one - I came away convinced that despite his hopes for and claims to the contrary, Eustace has not found the answer - or even correctly identified the problem.

Elizabeth Gilbert as an author is merely satisfactory. She is an apologist for Eustace's hopes and dreams but is brutally honest in her assessment of him as a person and as a leader.

If you get the chance, read The Last American Man.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: What a sad surprise!
Review: I picked up this book as I was browsing Amazon for non-fiction reads. At the time it was a little-known book. In fact, I rec'd an autographed copy from Amazon (thanks for making it all that much more special to own, Amazon). I felt a special connection to the hero of our tale, Eustace Conway and his chosen way of life. My brother lives much the same way; encouraged by his own insistent drive to live a natural life in a natural setting. Before I read this book I didn't really understand why my brother had to make everything more difficult. I owe my thanks to the author for pointing out that by choosing an "alternative way of life", my brother isn't rebelling against society, rather living in harmony with NATURE (instead of rebelling against nature as the rest of us do.) This is the melancholy account of one man's struggle to survive without the modern "necessities" or amenities that our wasteful American society has scarred the world with; and his attempt to enlighten the rest of us as to what really matters in life. LIFE matters, afterall; but there is definately a price to pay for living it Eustace Conway's way.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: DISGUSTING
Review: This book was lent to me to read because my boyfriend at the time was a Grizzly Adams wannabe. While Eustace Conway is indeed a unique individual, he has some SERIOUS issues with people. He does fine by himself and in public arenas as a self-promoting one-man-save-the-Earth propaganda mill, but he is incapable of having a two way relationship with other humans, the author being one of them. She worships him, obviously, but he doesn't seem to notice or reciprocate. Don't get me wrong. He seems like a nice guy and he indeed is fascinating, but I don't think the last American man would run off every woman he ever loved.
In terms of writing itself, I put it down several times in disgust. The woman seems desperate in her writing and descriptions. I couldn't sit and read it all at once, even though I wanted to. I was truly interested in the story, but, as it had been adequately described to me before I picked it up, I discovered it truly was metaphorical fellatio to a man who didn't care about anyone other than himself. I understand she is a journalist, but she shouldn't carry her journalistic style into a novel. It didn't work and I finished the book thinking "wow, that was a good story, but I can't stand this chic who wrote it." I gave it 3 stars based solely on the stories within. It isn't a horrible book if you can bear to sit through the syrupy homage the author pays to Mr. Conway.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Last (Thank Goodness!) American Man
Review: When I saw this book advertised in a periodical, I knew I would enjoy it. My own boyhood fantasies of wild independence were stirred by what appeared to be this great man's life.

While not a great man, Eustace is an incredible human being. Anyone with but a passing interest in wilderness living and primitive human heritage will be riveted by every other page of this book. The intervening pages may be a bit tedious for action-oriented types as these examine the finer points of Mr. Conway's psychological uniqueness, his family relationships, and his romantic (?!) adventures.

The writing is superbly done and the quality of the author makes reading a pleasure. My attraction to the story is based on my love of Appalachia (wilderness in general) and the extraordinary drama of life it stages every day. This book does not disappoint on that score - the wild exploits of Mr. Conway will captivate you. A great gift for that man or woman in your life who bemoans our civilization's increasing detachment from nature.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: There is a lesson - on parenting!!!
Review: I have to agree with Andy Redman's review to some extent. But I think there IS a very strong lesson in this book - and it's on parenting. I belong to a men's group through church and we're working through "Wild at Heart: Discovering the Secret of a Man's Soul" by John Eldredge. Eldgredge professes that American males need this adventure as a rite of passage. The heart of Eldridge's book is the heart of Gilbert's books. Conway was "wounded" by his father and was told he would not - could not succeed as a man.

With a degree in counseling and an love for outdoors adventure, I find the Conway story both interesting and sad. If his father had offered an ounce of compassion and nurturing, this story would never have been written.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: AMAZING!
Review: When I first started reading this book, I thought to myself, "How can a woman claim to write a book that goes so psychologically indepth into the male psych?" By the end of the book, all I could say was "wow". In the beginning, I too wanted to be an apprentice of Eustace. I loved the idea of living in the woods and removing myself from society. By the end of the book however, I realized that I wanted this, but I don't think Eustace is the man to give it to me. The whole idea of moving into a life in the woods, at least for me, is to find yourself as a part of nature. Eustace, however, won't let you be yourself -- you must be what he wants you to be. That is where I think his problems in relationships and in general develop. This can be applied to your own life too, and that is where the beauty of this book comes in.

This book was amazingly written, and hard to put down. Gilbert does an excellent job of showing Eustace's lifestlye, but also his person. At the end, you get a sense of the contradictions in his life, and how he is unable to match reality to his ideals. I highly recommend this book to anybody, escpecially those wanting to understand the outdoor's type male.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Extraordinary Tale About An Extraordinary Man
Review: I purchased this book because I was curious about a man who would elect to isolate himself from society although he was neither a hermit, a religious fanatic or a supremist. I was enthralled by the author's compelling portrait of a man who is depicted as a bundle of contradictions. Eustace Conway abandons society to live off the land on property he has pain-stakingly acquired in the Appalachian Mountains. To finance his wilderness enclave, Eustace is obliged to be a self-admitted "showman," teaching others how to live a "natural life." Although a true pioneer for whom expressions, such as "having too many irons in the fire," are actually used in their proper context, Eustace is restless, ambitious, egotistical and tormented. While eschewing our materialistic society, Eustace dreams of building a home befitting an Architectural Digest spread, replete with priceless Southwestern works of art and walk-in closets. Although craving a "partner," he is a chauvinist who seeks a docile and submissive woman with the stamina of a pack mule and the capacity to bear 13 children (yet, he rejects a seemingly perfect match because she has three children from a prior relationship).

Eustace's story is fascinating and the author enriches the tale with anecdotes both personal and historical, including sketches of early American frontiersmen, such as Daniel Boone and Davy Crockett (both shameless self-promoters)and tales of American utopias. Although other reviewers have criticized Ms. Gilbert for injecting herself in the story, it seemed that her relationship with Eustace and his family enhanced the tale and, despite her obvious affection for her subject, she managed to wrte a balanced exmaination of this "Man of Destiny."


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