America's leading essayist on the frantic retreat of democracy, in the fire and smoke of the war on terror
America's leading essayist reviews the course of American democracy and its frantic retreat amidst the paranoid fire and smoke of the war on terror.
“Without doubt our greatest satirist—elegant, honorable, learned and fair. I love reading him.”
—Kurt Vonnegut “Lewis Lapham—born of Mark Twain and H. L. Mencken—is the most provocative and engaging essayist in the country.”
—George Plimpton “One of the last liberal thinkers, a man of elegant humor. Should he wander onto the premises of Fox TV, he’d surely be shot down like a dog.”
—Liz Smith “Lapham’s indignation is ecumenical, his scorn spread as smoothly as butter from left to right and north to south across the face of contemporary America.”
—Boston Globe “Lapham is a wonderful writer, a connoisseur of the perfect word.”
—Business Week “The combination of Lapham’s urbane prose and lethal wit … makes for delightful reading.”
—Forbes “To read Lapham’s work, so erudite and conscientious, is to realize that saving our democracy will take bold-face truth-telling, bravery and a populace willing to change: An alchemical improbability. However, if you can read this book and not want to commit to the work necessary to save our democracy, you are already lost.”
—Literary Hub “Although frequently dark,
The Age of Folly comes with much humor and elegant writing … Lapham’s sharp prose pricks the self-importance of the powerful, who too often parade with claim to omniscience and omnipotency … Highly recommended.”
—Choice“[Illustrates] how and why our democracy has given way to a dysfunctional plutocracy of the super-rich, by the super-rich, and for the super-rich. Taken together, the book’s essays, published between 1990 and 2016 in
Lapham’s Quarterly and
Harper’s, serve as a powerful and alarming American history … With
Age of Folly, Lapham provides the historical context needed to understand our current political moment.”
—Adam Boretz, The Millions