Pittsburgh In Words

Rivers. Steel. Neighborhoods. Industry. Art. Football. Can words explain a city like Pittsburgh, with its rich history, complicated geography and diverse communities? Over the years, countless writerswho grew up in Pittsburgh, moved here or were just passing throughhave taken up the challenge. Many wrote with love; some, with faint praise. (Will the city ever live down being compared in 1868, by journalist James Parton, to “hell with the lid taken off”?) Now, in celebration of Pittsburgh’s 250th anniversary, we’ve invited seven writers to tell new stories about the city and its people. The resulting collectionCNF’s first devoted entirely to its hometown as a subjectcontains memories of teenage trips and family businesses, tales of immersion into unfamiliar communities and accounts of early mornings on the river, as well as thoughts about what it all means. One thing’s for sureit’s more than just words.

Reviews

“Writing about Pittsburgh” is a fraught enterprise. You either get tangled in clichésdon’t make me repeat themor spend half your time denying the clichés have snared you.

So what’s surprising about Pittsburgh in Words, the 250th-birthday offering to the city from the locally based Creative Nonfiction Foundation, is that some of its most successful essays do accept the challenge of defining the place. […]

The collection’s strongest work engages very particular subject matter as a way to explore larger issues includingbut not limited towhat Pittsburgh’s all about. Probably not by coincidence, this also tends to be the work that gives the best sense of a writer venturing, if not out of his or her comfort zone, at least into a wider world beyond family and friends. – Bill O’Driscoll

– See more at: http://www.creativenonfiction.org/reviews/133#sthash.RPVa4LcN.dpuf

—Pittsburgh City Paper