Anne Elizabeth Moore was born in Winner, South Dakota. She has written several critically acclaimed nonfiction books, including the Lambda Literary Award-nominated Body Horror- Capitalism, Fear, Misogyny, Jokes, which was a Chicago Public Library Best Book of 2017, and Sweet Little Cunt, which won an Eisner Award. She lives in Hobart, New York, with her cat, Captain America.
An NPR Best Book of the Year
"Through a series of darkly comic vignettes . . . [Moore] uncovers
the city's incompetent governance . . . Moore's project here is not
just to illuminate the city's chaos and who profits from it.
Gentrifier is also an investigation of the costs-monetary,
psychological, ethical-of her free house, and an ode to the
neighbors who gave her life there inflections of joy." -Kristen
Martin, NPR
"[A] hilarious and harrowing account of her new life as a
homeowner." -Keith A. Spencer, Salon
"Moore also holds the serious alongside the hilarious, and the
clarity and intelligence of her prose illuminates both. Original,
funny, and brilliant, this book outmaneuvers, outshines, and will
outlive so many memoirs that seek to cover the same tenuous
ground." -Kerri Arsenault, Orion Magazine
"Moore started writing sections of what would become this book as
jokes. And by jokes, I mean anecdotal set-up and punchline: jokes.
It's a structure that lends itself to be consumed. I moved through
the pages waiting to see how the jokes transform from humorous, to
fascinating, to devastating, taking the reader back and forth in
time to get a full scope of her experience . . . In an oppressive,
broken housing system, Anne Elizabeth Moore's Gentrifier
serves as the guide for how to laugh at the absurdity of
bureaucracy." -Joshua Bohnsack, Newcity Lit
"Moore infuses this memoir with keenly researched insights about
the historical forces that created Detroit's (and America's)
housing crisis, creating a heartfelt, funny, thought-provoking
meditation on the multifaceted fallacy of the American Dream."
-Booklist (starred review)
"Eye-opening . . . A unique, lovely meditation on the power of
community." -Kirkus Reviews
"Incisive . . . A trenchant meditation on how communities come
together, and the forces that drive them apart." -Publishers
Weekly
"Both comedic and fierce . . . Moore's experiences will draw in
readers interested in an intimate perspective on housing issues or
life in recent Detroit. She provides thoughtful perspective on
community, capitalism, and making art in difficult times."
-Library Journal
"This kaleidoscopic page-turner chronicles the absurdities and
hard-won joys of existing in a body, a household, a community, and
a country. I don't know how Anne managed to write the funniest book
I've read in years *and* the most honest one about the scramble of
American life, but she did, and we are the better for it." -Jace
Clayton, author of Uproot
"Gentrifier is a fascinating read: a writer's dream comes
true and she is given a house of her own, a house to write in, but
things do not go as planned. Anne Elizabeth Moore is a superb and
compassionate writer; this is a sweet, difficult, excellent book."
-Audrey Niffenegger, author of The Time Traveler's Wife
"With wry humor and uncommon insight, Anne Elizabeth Moore crafts
an intimate portrait of self-determination and communal possibility
in a resilient Detroit neighborhood. Yes, this book is about
gentrification, but it is also about neighborhood sustainability,
government corruption, nonprofit hypocrisy, chronic illness,
gardening, girlhood, family, racism, education, misogyny, autonomy,
queer striving, a writer's life, and the elusive and ever-present
search for home." -Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore, author of The
Freezer Door
"Gentrifier is an indictment of institutionalized racism,
xenophobia, and greed-in both public and private spheres. But the
heart of the book lies with Moore's personal story, told with
warmth and self-deprecating wit, breezy and deep in turn." -Abeer
Hoque, author of Olive Witch
"Funny, tender, rigorous, and alive, Anne Elizabeth Moore's
Gentrifier is the best book I've read on this freighted
subject, and so much more. Along the way, you learn a lot about the
wonders and complexities of one particular neighborhood in Detroit,
but in turn your own community-what you've overlooked, and all you
want to make better. A tour de force by a writer who is smart
enough to let activism and absurdity sit side by side, and let them
go. I'm in awe." -Paul Lisicky, author of Later: My Life at the
Edge of the World
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