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Read This: A Good War is Hard to Find

Non-fiction by David Griffith (Soft Skull Books)


REVIEW BY Brian Joseph Davis

The Jam once ambivalently sang, “A smash of glass and the rumble of boots, an electric train and a ripped up phone booth, paint splattered walls and the cry of a tom cat, lights going out and a kick in the balls…that’s entertainment.” It’s a sentiment also echoed in David Griffith’s first person essay, A Good War Is Hard to Find.

Focusing mostly on the strangeness of the Abu Ghraib torture photos and ’90s-style transgressive culture, Griffith’s thesis is that society is suffering a disconnect between its feelings and the images we produce. As a subjective essay, A Good War takes its time in saying what it wants to say, but Griffith’s impassioned and always-questioning mind makes the journey worthwhile. Even if you disagree with him (as I do), take comfort that someone is asking uncomfortable questions about what makes what worthy of humour, or disgust.

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