Morning After the Revolution - Nellie Bowles

Morning After the Revolution

By Nellie Bowles

  • Release Date: 2024-05-14
  • Genre: Political Science
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 35 Ratings

Description

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER

From former New York Times reporter Nellie Bowles, a look at how some of the most educated people in America lost their minds—and how she almost did, too.


As a Hillary voter, a New York Times reporter, and frequent attendee at her local gay bars, Nellie Bowles fit right in with her San Francisco  neighbors and friends—until she started questioning  whether the progressive movement she knew and loved was actually helping people. When her colleagues suggested that asking such questions meant she was “on the wrong side of history,” Bowles did what any reporter worth her salt would do: she started investigating for herself. The answers she found were stranger—and funnier—than she expected.

In Morning After the Revolution, Bowles gives readers a front-row seat to the absurd drama of a political movement gone mad. With irreverent accounts of attending a multiday course on “The Toxic Trends of Whiteness,” following the social justice activists who run “Abolitionist Entertainment LLC,” and trying to please the New York Times’s “disinformation czar,” she deftly exposes the more comic excesses of a movement that went from a sideshow to the very center of American life.

Deliciously funny and painfully insightful, Morning After the Revolution is a moment of collective psychosis preserved in amber. This is an unmissable debut by one of America’s sharpest journalists.

Reviews

  • Good reporting

    5
    By BP696901
    Having watched it unfold in real time here in Seattle, it’s refreshing to read a liberal’s view of what happened and how it went so painfully wrong.
  • A great overview of how crazy our political world has become

    5
    By ajfrazer
    As a conservative I appreciated the perspective of a liberal on just how crazy the progressive movement has become over the last few years. The fringe on the right and the left have deeply divided us as a nation and we need both sides to call out their own side when they see madness like this occurring. Lord knows the right has its fair share of problems to. We can agree to disagree on a lot of issues, but common sense, logic and human decency should always be observed. I think the author does a good job in describing what is going on within progressive circles, and I appreciated the humor injected in it as well. Well worth a read!
  • A very important read

    5
    By curlupandreadabook
    This was riveting to read . . . and very difficult at times. I’m so happy someone had the “balls” to write it.
  • Explaining What We Don’t Understand-good and bad.

    5
    By DKCMC
    As a southern older conservative thinker but independent voter, this book helped me understand some of the underpinnings of the liberal thought processes that find headlines every minute. It is thought provoking enough to make you want to understand more, yet frightening enough to hope the world does not continue on this path of destruction. I think the author is brave to risk much but provides a glimpse of so much we fail to grasp. I read it in one sitting. Side note: read it for a second time..one sitting. Can’t explain why this book entices so much- maybe because it elicits a certain anger while providing an honest backdrop to very extreme movements, but I hope others will read it more than once.
  • A must read for a 74 year old white man.

    5
    By Harry Angstom
    Absolutely loved it. Keeps me young. All old farts should read it.