A Graying American Looks Back at His Suburban Boyhood and Wonders What the Hell Happened
Ratings4
Average rating3.8
One of the New Yorker's Best Books of 2022 Bill McKibben—award-winning author, activist, educator—is fiercely curious. “I’m curious about what went so suddenly sour with American patriotism, American faith, and American prosperity.” Like so many of us, McKibben grew up believing—knowing—that the United States was the greatest country on earth. As a teenager, he cheerfully led American Revolution tours in Lexington, Massachusetts. He sang “Kumbaya” at church. And with the remarkable rise of suburbia, he assumed that all Americans would share in the wealth. But fifty years later, he finds himself in an increasingly doubtful nation strained by bleak racial and economic inequality, on a planet whose future is in peril. And he is curious: What the hell happened? In this revelatory cri de coeur, McKibben digs deep into our history (and his own well-meaning but not all-seeing past) and into the latest scholarship on race and inequality in America, on the rise of the religious right, and on our environmental crisis to explain how we got to this point. He finds that he is not without hope. And he wonders if any of that trinity of his youth—The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon—could, or should, be reclaimed in the fight for a fairer future.
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Easily one of the best books I've read in the past five years. McKibben's facts are in order, but he can also tell a story, and story is one of the things we need in order to change hearts and minds. I think if I was granted to the power to make every conservative (and for that matter every liberal) understand one set of facts, one perspective, it would be the worldview laid out here. Deeply political, deeply felt, deeply if comfortably holistic, the message here is so important that our collective existence hinges on our understanding, and yet I'm not sure how optimistic I am that we will get there in the end.