Book Review: Great American Beer. Christopher O’Hara

This is a handy neat smaller format hardcover that the publisher was kind enough to FedEx me this week. And I am glad they did as this is a dandy guide to its exact topic: post WWII, pre-micro revolution pre-branding US beer. The author gladly admits this in the introduction:

The antithesis of the recent microbrewery revolution in America, this was a time when the major beer powerhouses took control of the brewing industry and, in the grand spirit of American industry, relentlessly quashed the small, independent producers that relied upon local support. This story is about the Americanization of beer, where homogenized brands – grown through a mixture of political clout, industrialization, and marketing might – became the best loved, and most heavily consumed beer brands in the world.

This is an unapologetic book in a time of review and perhaps revision. As Ken Wells discussed in Travels With Barley, despite all the efforts and successes in the craft brewing revival, this is a continent of lovers of beer-flavoured water making that still the primary cultural phenonmena to be grappled with when considering beer.

This book tells the story not so much of how that occured as who was involved. And it does so with style and wit. It is a primarily a series of fifty 500 to 200 word essays on the individual brands that made up the wave of oneness that is macrobrewing, from Bud to Blatz to Utica Club. Because this is as much pre-brand as pre-craft, there are no discussions of those “Bud Draft Dry Light Ice” sorts of beers that popped their heads up starting in the late 1970s – the word Light…or rather Lite…does not appear in the table of contents. This is a book that argues for a golden age and makes a pretty good argument for it. Even with the eighteen page history, this is not academic tome or a deep dive into the culture but, as you can expect, that could be an issue which, once raised, might be legitimately greeted with a shout of “academic, schmacademic.”

The book heavily relies upon images of the collection of beer stuff collector Erik Amundson, which you can see at the web site www.taverntrove.com. This is good and well handled as the advertising, packaging and other flotsom and jetsom of the brewers played such a huge role in differentiating a homogenized product. It is presented attractively along with well-written, informative text providing a book for the beer fan not scared to be presented with the phrases like “trendy imports” and “craft snobbery”. I’d say get it.

One thought on “Book Review: Great American Beer. Christopher O’Hara”

  1. [Original comments…]

    Chris O’Hara – August 22, 2006 9:17 PM
    http://www.chrisohara.com
    Hey — great review. Thanks for the nice words. I doubt regular readers of your blog would agree with me, but I sincerely love a good, cold Budweiser 9 times out of ten. Anyway, the book is kind of a gift book that you might pick up for your Dad, who loved Schaffer, or perhaps your brother who just got out of college…

    Alan – August 22, 2006 9:26 PM
    Exactly. I think most of my readers are folk who appreciate beer as it exists in the space time continuum and once upon a time, in a land far far away…this was beer. What I like about your book most of all is that you stuck to that framing and were not apologetic about – which at the same time being interesting. There are plenty of beer writers who can’t manage either focus or being interesting so I say good luck to you. And pop by any time if you have comments even if there is a lot of “snob-magnet” brews around the place…even if we are not snobs.

    Chris O’Hara – September 1, 2006 10:56 PM
    http://www.chrisohara.com
    Love the blog, so I’ll be around. Actually I’m drinking a nice Sierra Nevada right now. I don’t know if it’s snob beer material or not, but I can tell you that my third one is the tastiest so far…

    Alan – September 1, 2006 11:18 PM
    That is beauty, Chris – who knows, maybe you will keep us honest around here.

    John – February 1, 2007 10:12 AM
    http://www.drinksos.com
    It is interesting to read about drinking beer in books.

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