No?
Oh well, I have ordered 'Homeland' (£6, mostly postage, from the USA).
Amazon says: "This exceptional collection shows Gifford at the height of his powers, navigating with ease the new, more fragmented imaginative landscape of post-9/11 America. Gifford seems to have anticipated themes that suddenly are recognisable everywhere: the fragility of identity; the power of coincidence; the illusion of a secure future. In contrast to his often nightmarish novels of the 1990s, Wild At Heart, Perdita Duranga, and Night People, this is a gentle overture, a submission of grace and beauty at a time when cultural discourse has moved in the opposite direction." (Which is strange because the book is by Maharidge)
A UK reviewer says:
"..an excellent introduction to the nationalist psychopathologies that haunt the American heartland and came dramatically and dangerously to the surface after 9/11. Maharidge is an excellent journalist who concentrates on individual and atypical Americans but at the same time never loses sight of the bigger picture behind the emergence of a more aggressive and intolerant America and that picture is economic decline."
A US reviewer says:
"Maharidge makes no secret of his left-wing perspective, but that doesn't mean this book is a political tract. On the contrary, he bends over backwards to be fair and non-judgmental toward the people he interviews, even when he's talking with white supremacists and other unsavory characters. Maharidge has his own opinion, but thankfully, he also has a genuine desire to understand events from the perspective of those who differ from him politically."