![]() As we reach its pearl anniversary, I can’t help but connect this book with Matthew 7:6 and not “casting your pearls before pigs, lest they trample them underfoot, and turn again and rend you.” Such is the wisdom of this small, epiphanic book about a drifter, druggie, drunk, and ne’er do well as he slowly finds himself working out of drug addiction and acedia and toward a hard-earned, sober redemption and reengagement with the world. I’ll say no more.” I read it often, and I’ve been handing it to students, friends, and family members ever since. A professor at Brooklyn College handed me my first copy in the late 1990’s-he said only this: “Read this. It’s a repeat offender, in the best sense of the term. Denis Johnson’s Jesus’ Son is one of those books you read in a single sitting, again and again. It’s been three decades since a slim volume of 11 interconnected stories, cobbled together for a few thousand dollars to keep the IRS at bay, changed the landscape of American literature. ![]()
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