Bissell has written for Harper's Magazine, Slate, The New Republic, and The Virginia Quarterly Review, where he is a contributing editor. While much of Bissell's magazine writing could be considered travel writing, his articles are more concerned with politics, history, and autobiography than tourism. As a journalist he traveled to Iraq and Afghanistan during wartime. Bissell's literary work has been recognized and highlighted at Michigan State University in their Michigan Writers Series. His book in collaboration with Jeff Alexander, "Speak, Commentary", is a collection of fake DVD commentaries for popular films by political figures and pundits such as Noam Chomsky, Dinesh D'Souza and Ann Coulter. His other books have earned him several prizes, including the Rome Prize, the Anna Akhmatova Prize, and the Best Travel Writing Award from Peace Corps Writers. His journalism has been anthologized in The Best American Travel Writing, and The Best American Science Writing. While much of Bissell's writing is concerned with issues of international relations and literary criticism, he frequently references Star Wars, J.R.R. Tolkien, and video games as well. The video game Gears of War 2, the first version of which Bissell wrote about for The New Yorker, contains a character named Hank Bissell, an apparent nod to him. In a March 2010 Observer article, he wrote about the appeal of games like Grand Theft Auto IV and his own simultaneous struggles with addiction to video games and cocaine. Bissell wrote about the cult film The Room in a 2010 article published in Harper's Magazine. In May 2011, he signed on to co-write a closer look at the film – the resultant book, The Disaster Artist, was published by Simon and Schuster in October 2013. Bissell's story "Expensive Trips Nowhere" was filmed as The Loneliest Planet.
Approach
While Bissell has been critical of neo-conservatism, the Bush administration, and American unilateralism, his politics often do not fit within established categories of American liberalism and conservatism. Much of his work is concerned with the legacy of the Soviet Union and Communism. He has cited Philip Caputo as a major influence, along with Michigan writers Jim Harrison and Thomas McGuane.
Fiction
In 2005, Pantheon published a collection of Bissell's short fiction, God Lives in St. Petersburg: and Other Stories. In the same year, his story "Death Defier" was published in the Best American Short Stories. His story "Aral" inspired Werner Herzog's 2016 film Salt and Fire.
Awards
2010 Guggenheim Fellow
Rome Prize
Writers Guild of America Award
Books
Chasing the Sea: Lost Among the Ghosts of Empire in Central Asia
Speak, Commentary: The Big Little Book of Fake Dvd Commentaries
God Lives in St. Petersburg: and Other Stories
The Father of All Things: A Marine, His Son, and the Legacy of Vietnam