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Sounding for Cool

Donald Morrill

Donald Morrill is a professor of English at the University of Tampa and poetry editor of the Tampa Review. He is the author of two previous books of nonfiction, most recently Sounding fo...

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Sounding for Cool

Donald Morrill


Winner of the 2003 Best of the Press Award,
selected by the American Library Association's University Press Books Committee and the AAUP


Sounding for Cool is a story about self- transformation, about growing up on one’s own as a product of contemporary America, and about how to become not just a man, but a contributing adult in society. Donald Morrill presents the day- to-day lives of seven young men (white, black, Hispanic, immigrant, poor, middle-class, thick- headed, and smart), who for various reasons have become homeless. Placed in a Transitional Living Program facility (TLP) by the courts, these men must learn to navigate in the world of “normal” values and reasonable rules. Streetwise and callow, trained to seek shortcuts or to make excuses, they struggle with the structures and assumptions inherent in living a law-abiding, bill-paying life. While sorting out their souls, they learn how to connect with others. In turn, Sounding for Cool scrutinizes the staff of the TLP, one woman and three men, who variously come to terms with their lives by settling accounts from the past. As a TLP volunteer, Donald Morrill often finds himself bridging the gap between staff and client. In the process of telling their stories, he chronicles his own journey to understand the past. Ultimately, Sounding for Cool asks the enduring questions, “Who am I in the world and what can I become?”


Praise for Sounding for Cool

"Don Morrill doesn’t just write, he unpeels, always searching for a deeper layer of truth beneath the observable fact. He is as poetic as he is merciless. As he shows time and again in Sounding for Cool, Morrill spares no one his scrutiny—not the troubled young men of the Transitional Living Program, not himself and not us. By his own rigorous self- examination, Morrill denies us the customary comfort of a sideline seat. He compels us to reconnect intimately with young men who we have already written off. Everything is at stake in Morrill’s book; the pay- off for the daring reader is just as great.

Bill Duryea, staff writer, St. Petersburg Times


World rights
256 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", 2002
Cloth, $29.95,

0-87013-611-9
978-0-87013-611-5

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