Even in his own telling the author seems like a contemptible centrist incapable of articulating or even evaluating a moral argument. Half the book seems like a search for powerful government officials (or, in one episode, a collection of midlist actors) to name drop and then defer judgment to.

Terse and lightly ornamented, the book's unhurried tour through the inevitable collapse of a startup is strongest as a kind of counterexample in form and function to the trite parables that plague business books. A similarly succinct moral can be drawn, though: reality always wins in the end.

A disturbing thought experiment that paradoxically neuters itself with overtly fetishized ultraviolence and perverse sex shit. The scenario is horrific by its nature, or it would be if the torture porn wasn't constantly upstaging it.

A powerful account of the political and personal examining (and empathizing with) successive generations caught on the wrong side of history by their adherence to principle. In recognizing both past liberal achievements and the potential for future projects it's a inspiration to cure disaffection.

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