After the Flood
Inside Bob Dylan's Memory Palace
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- $20.99
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- $20.99
Publisher Description
Blending biography and archival history, After the Flood asks of Bob Dylan, “If your dreams are fulfilled at twenty, what do you do with the rest of your life?”
A familiar narrative goes: Bob Dylan, the voice of sixties counterculture, disappeared in the 1970s, then released arguably the worst music of his career in the 1980s—only to be resurrected in 2016, when he was controversially awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. Dylan’s concerts once began with an announcer intoning a deadpan version of just such a narrative.
That is not this story.
Here, instead, is Dylan’s second thirty years. Across an abecedarium of chapters surveying his albums, performances, films, and books since 1991—since that rainy February night in New York City when Dylan, then forty-nine, accepted a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, signaling in effect that his extraordinary vocation as a vital and indispensable creative force had ended, was over—After the Flood reveals Dylan’s creative output during the last three decades as his most ambitious and accomplished yet.
Drawing on thousands of pages from Dylan’s newly opened archive in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and anatomizing hundreds of published and unpublished lyrics, liner notes, and more, celebrated poet and biographer Robert Polito demonstrates how Dylan evolved a late musical style that has equally embodied and resisted its era, interweaving folk process and American and world history, and transforming spectral cultural memory into devastating inspiration. Polito thus establishes Dylan as an intensely literary songwriter whose recent writings, especially, are dynamic, intricate, and far-reaching collages.
Between Good as I Been to You (1992) and Shadow Kingdom (2023), across Desert Storm, 9/11, and COVID-19, Polito shows that Dylan revitalized lines and contexts from sources as diverse as classical Greece and Rome, the American Civil War, and film noir, tipping Henry Timrod, poet laureate of the Confederacy, into Muddy Waters; slanting Herman Melville, John Winthrop, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow into Stephen Foster, Dan Emmett, and Al Jolson; and secreting Marcel Proust into his own literal California backyard—to touch on just a few of the storerooms inside Dylan’s astonishing “memory palace.”
Imaginatively researched, boldly arranged, and with elegiac insights into the cunning behind his songs, After the Flood is an essential revision and continuation of the Dylan saga, and a must-read for all Dylan enthusiasts.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Drawing on a wealth of archival material, biographer Polito (Savage Art) reframes Bob Dylan's "second thirty years" as a period of unprecedented creativity and growth. Arranging the account in a loose and mostly nonchronological structure, Polito plumbs the dizzying array of sources Dylan drew on from 1991 to 2024 as he revised and expanded his body of work. He pulled from Ovid and little-remembered 19th-century Southern poet Henry Timrod to comment on the legacy of slavery in 2006's Modern Times, for example, and wove F. Scott Fitzgerald, Othello, and other influences into 2001's Love and Theft, an album at once autobiographical and sweeping in its commentary on race, American history, and popular music. In the process, Dylan mixed so-called "folk process" with literary modernism to further evolve his songwriting style. He also experimented with his performance style, utilizing a broader spectrum of tones with results that could be erratic or memorable ("When he's on, Dylan empathizes so intensively and absolutely with a song that he disappears inside the instant-upon-instant disclosure of it"). Polito's analyses are intricate and revealing, if occasionally overwhelming—one chapter spends several pages scrutinizing inscriptions in Dylan's high school yearbook. Intimate details and astute critiques coalesce into a rich portrait of an artist ceaselessly remaking himself. Dylan devotees couldn't ask for a more thorough consideration of an under-studied part of his oeuvre.