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In this “crisp, engaging, and very smart” (The New York Times Book Review) work, The Washington Post’s Pulitzer Prize–winning book critic digs into books of the Trump era and finds that our response to this presidency often reflects the same polarization, contradictions, and resentments that made it possible. It is an irony of our age that a man who rarely reads has unleashed an onslaught of books about his tenure and his time. Dissections of the white working class. Manifestos of political resistance. Works on identity, gender, and migration. Memoirs on race and protest. Revelations of White House mayhem. Warnings over the future of conservatism, progressivism, and of American democracy itself. As a book critic for The Washington Post, Carlos Lozada has read just about all of them. In What Were We Thinking, he draws on some 150 recent volumes to explore how we understand ourselves in the Trump era. Lozada’s characters are not the president, his advisers, or his antagonists but the political and cultural ideas at play—and at stake—in America. Just as Trump’s election upended the country’s political establishment, it shocked its intellectual class. Though some of the books of the Trump era skillfully illuminate the challenges and transformations the nation faces, too many works are more defensive than incisive, more righteous than right. Lozada offers a provocative argument: Whether written by liberals or conservatives, activists or academics, true believers or harsh critics, the books of Trump’s America are vulnerable to the same failures of imagination that gave us this presidency in the first place. In What Were We Thinking, Lozada’s selections range from bestselling titles to little-known works, from thoroughly reported accounts of the administration to partisan polemics, from meditations on the fate of truth to memoirs about enduring—or enabling—the Trump presidency. He also identifies books that challenge entrenched assumptions and shift our vantage points, the books that best help us make sense of this era. The result is an “elegant yet lacerating” (The Guardian) intellectual history of our time, a work that transcends daily headlines to discern how we got here and how we thought here. What Were We Thinking will help today’s readers understand America, and will help tomorrow’s readers look back and understand us.
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This is the book I have been looking for since November 2016. I wanted to find something that would explain to me how we elected 45 and how we were going to survive him. Fortunately for me, Carlos Lozada read a LOT of books (150 of them!) and summarizes their themes and messages through 10 topically-related chapters that discuss books written about the “white working class” voter, the chaos inside the White House, radical leftist resistance and conservative apologies, the death of truth and so much more about the turned-upside down world we have inhabited for the past four years.
Intellectually this is a good book, but the chapters in which Lozada allows himself a personal connection are stunning. The most devastating chapters were the ones written about #MeToo and immigration. Neither were new phenomena, but they were both exacerbated and impacted by Trump's election. You can feel Lozada's pain and growth as he realizes what women endured at the hands of Harvey Weinstein, et al, and how Trump's infamous “Access Hollywood” tape and the Brett Kavanaugh hearings made that pain so much more devastating. And as a former immigrant himself, Lozada's insights into the current crisis enrich the books he recommends.
Ultimately Lozada believes that the best books of the past four years don't view Trump as an isolated aberration but as the product of American history and politics. What We Were Thinking was released before the November 2020 election, but if he were writing an epilogue today I'm sure the author would warn readers that a Biden presidency doesn't mean all of our problems are solved. The factors that created a Trump presidency are still there and we have to examine and deal with them in order to prevent Trump 2024 or someone (god help us) even worse.
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