#159 American Rust - Philipp Meyer (Crime) Titelbild

#159 American Rust - Philipp Meyer (Crime)

#159 American Rust - Philipp Meyer (Crime)

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About the Book:

Published in 2009, American Rust is a stark, deeply human portrait of life in a collapsing industrial town in western Pennsylvania. The novel follows Isaac English and Billy Poe, two young men caught between loyalty, anger, and the dwindling promise of a future that once seemed guaranteed. When a violent incident shatters their already-fragile lives, the consequences ripple outward, touching parents, lovers, and an entire community struggling to survive economic ruin.

Gritty yet compassionate, American Rust examines masculinity, class, moral responsibility, and the quiet desperation of people left behind by history. Meyer’s prose is unsentimental but deeply empathetic, revealing how love, shame, and hope persist even in the shadow of decline. The novel was widely praised for its emotional depth and realism and later adapted into a television series, cementing its place as a modern American tragedy.

About the Author:

Philipp Meyer is an American novelist known for his ambitious scope and meticulous realism. Born in New York City, Meyer worked a variety of jobs before turning to fiction, experiences that helped shape his grounded, working-class characters. American Rust was his debut novel and earned critical acclaim for its authenticity and emotional power.

Meyer later published The Son (2013), a multigenerational epic of Texas that won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, and The North Water (2016), a brutal historical novel set in the Arctic whaling world. Across his work, Meyer explores violence, inheritance, and the forces—economic, historical, and personal—that shape American identity. His novels are marked by their moral seriousness and refusal to look away from hard truths.

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