Peter Kaldheim graduated in English and Classics from Dartmouth, before going on to work in publishing (as head copy editor at Harcourt then acquiring editor at Van Nostrand Reinhold), but an addiction to drugs caused his life to come apart, landing him in Rikers Island jail after he sold cocaine to an undercover drug squad agent. He now lives in Lindenhurst, Long Island, where he fishes for fluke on charter boats out of Montauk. Idiot Wind is his first book.
Compelling and gutsy * * Brinkwire * * A very readable, even superior, addition to the addiction memoir genre * * Library Journal * * Idiot Wind recounts Kaldheim's very human efforts to swim to shore with compassion and gratitude * * NPR * * Peter Kaldheim's honesty and optimistic persistence in every circumstance make for a powerful and compelling narrative . . . Idiot Wind provides a unique and important insight into homelessness in the US and is engaging from start to finish * * The Skinny * * Although it is a memoir set in the Reagan years, the milieu still feels so contemporary . . . For those vulnerable and stranded in the US, certain things appear to have remained unchanged * * Guardian * * The smart, easygoing voice, personal honesty, and downright humility I found in Peter Kaldheim's memoir, Idiot Wind, grabbed me from the very first page, and I ended up never wanting it to end -- DONALD RAY POLLOCK Idiot Wind gives the definitive, harrowing, and often grimly hilarious answer to the question of what happens to a person when he drops off the map , his old life no longer viable and his new life nowhere in sight -- WALTER KIRN Idiot Wind is an utterly compelling memoir - the story of a life squandered and ultimately reclaimed. For all his self-confessed debauchery, Kaldheim is an acute observer and a great storyteller: the chapters on his nights as a homeless coke dealer in downtown Manhattan in the eighties are harrowing and hilarious. And his descriptions of his subsequent hobo peregrinations are rich in gritty detail. Kaldheim channels Orwell, Kerouac and Frederick Exley as he stumbles across America and finally finds his unlikely way to redemption -- JAY MCINERNEY A warm-hearted and witty mix of Jack Kerouac's On The Road and George Orwell's Down and Out In Paris and London * * The Times * *