Free shipping on all orders over $40
With deep reporting from America’s blue-collar heartland coupled with quantitative data analysis explaining how representative each of the people we meet are, Second Class will provide readers with an ethnography of today’s working class, introducing them to people across the country—their neighbors—who are fighting tooth and nail for a fair shot at the American Dream.
This book explains how it is not Soviet Marxism, but a Marxism that was shaped by European intellectuals, adapted and refined by America’s student radicals of the 1960s, and diffused throughout the culture that has caused today’s social ills.
In this exciting book, full of surprising details, Zitelmann describes how economic reforms in Vietnam and Poland won the fight against poverty and sensationally improved people’s standard of living.
This edited volume, sponsored by the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and featuring contributions from W.B. Allen, Judge Janice Rogers Brown (ret.), Ian Rowe, Sally Pipes, Stephen Moore, and others, addresses this question in light of American values and the history of constitutional jurisprudence.
In eight chapters, the inimitable Anthony Daniels dilates on some forgotten writers of Père Lachaise, exploring their literary merit and the amusing byways of history, aiming “to entertain while illustrating the inexhaustible depth of our past.”
This book traces the source of modern America’s cultural and political divisions to an unlikely historical accident.
In this volume, Charles Kesler’s students, friends, and colleagues commemorate his four-decade career as a teacher, mentor, and scholar.
The Race to Zero provides a detailed rebuttal to the case for sustainable investing from the perspective of a long-time Wall Street analyst, investor, and latter-day finance professor.
The Nature of Things Fragile is the winner of the twenty-third New Criterion Poetry Prize.
This book explains the ambitions and interests of European powers during the American Revolution.
American Refugees is the story of how a culture clash precipitated a great blue state exodus, and what it means for the rest of America. Focusing particularly on Tennessee as a paradigm, Simon contends that only the red states can preserve the constitutional republic envisioned by the Founders. Only they can save America for our children and grandchildren. The struggle will be great, but the story will ultimately have a happy ending.
In this book, the authors detail both the history of the comfort women and their own persecution at the hands of their academic peers. Only in the West—and only through a brutal strategy of censorship and ostracism—has the myth of bayonet-point conscription survived.
This eye-popping book provides an insider’s view into the federal bureaucracy’s corruption, its weaponization of bureaucratic procedures, and its failures to protect employees from retaliation. It explains what future administrations must do to make real progress in swamp draining. And it shows how a rejuvenation of patriotism and faith is needed to restore integrity to the government.
Many people have the wrong idea about China – they see all the strengths and few of the weaknesses. I’m writing this book to correct that misperception. China is much more fragile than it outwardly appears.