Review by Choice Review
This is a "now it can be told" book." It traces the subversion of American democracy, the rise of selfish individualism, and the granting of free speech rights to corporations to a Nobel Prize-winning economist, James Buchanan, whose ideas, according to McLean (Duke), provide the ideological spine for the dark money of the Koch brothers and others, who are hell-bent on subverting American democracy. According to McLean, they are well on their way to doing so. This is not a scholarly work: it is, at best, advocacy journalism by an academic, at worst a one-sided screed. The very title of the work reveals its character, as do the phrases used to characterize it: a chilling story of right-wing academics and big money run amok--never mind that that big money is a phenomena of the Left as well as the Right. Not recommended. Summing Up: Not recommended. --Peter J. Galie, Canisius College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review
DEMOCRACY IN CHAINS: The Deep History of the Radical Right's Stealth Plan for America, by Nancy MacLean. (Penguin, $18.) MacLean sketches out the six-decade push to protect the wealthy elite from the will of the majority. The architect of this plan was James McGill Buchanan, a political economist who, starting in the mid-1900s, devoted his career to paving the way for a right-wing social movement. BLACK MAD WHEEL, by Josh Malerman. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $15.99.) A rock 'n' roll band, the Danes, is approached by a top military official to help identify a mysterious, but potent, noise: The sound seems able to neutralize any kind of weapon, and even make people disappear. As the story goes to the African desert and beyond, the novel "takes flight in some head-splitting metaphysical directions," Terrence Rafferty wrote here. THE WORLD BROKE IN TWO: Virginia Woolf, T. S. Eliot, D. H. Lawrence, E. M. Forster, and the Year That Changed Literature, by Bill Goldstein. (Picador, $18.) The year 1922 was pivotal for these modernists. Goldstein makes good use of their correspondence and published material to outline each writer's development and creative blocks, and how their work fit into a broader postwar movement. MOVING KINGS, by Joshua Cohen. (Random House, $17.) David King is a heavyweight in the moving industry in New York, the patriotic, Republican and wealthy owner of a well-known storage company. In a moment of nostalgia, he invites his distant cousin Yoav, fresh from service in Israel's military, to work for him, carrying out the business's ugly side - evicting delinquent tenants and seizing their possessions. The novel and its tensions promise some thematic heft, touching on race, occupation, gentrification and who deserves the right to a home. THE LONG HAUL: A Trucker's Tales of Life on the Road, by Finn Murphy. (Norton, $16.95.) Murphy has logged hundreds of thousands of miles and decades on the road, but may be an unlikely representative: He falls asleep reading Jane Austen in motels and nurtures a crush on Terry Gross, "probably because I've spent more time with her than anyone else in my life." SUNBURN, by Laura Lippman. (Morrow/HarperCollins, $16.99.) In a sleepy Delaware town, two newcomers - a waitress running from her past and a short-order cook - fall in love, though the two are not what they claim to be. Set in 1995, this novel has an undertow of 1940s noir, but with more heart than you might expect. As our reviewer, Harriet Lane, wrote: "You see the huge red sun sinking into the cornfields; you feel the dew underfoot."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [January 31, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review
*Starred Review* For those who think the Tea Party, Freedom Caucus, and the alt-right are recent constructs, MacLean (Freedom Is Not Enough, 2006) provides an extensive history lesson that traces the genesis of the right wing back to post-WWII doctrines. The buildup to the takedown of democracy as we know it has been a long, dedicated, and patient campaign to, as it were, repeal and replace every facet of public governance. Though now firmly in the hands of Wall Street and inside-the-Beltway billionaires, MacLean argues that the roots of this political philosophy started with a lower-middle-class political economist from the backwaters of Tennessee, Nobel Prize winner James McGill Buchanan. Buchanan established a think tank in response to the groundbreaking Brown v. Board of Education decision and espoused the kind of libertarian and neoconservative rhetoric that is currently enjoying an unprecedented resurgence. Eventually, Buchanan's nihilistic zeal attracted multibillionaire Charles Koch, and the union of Buchanan's fanaticism with Koch's unlimited finances, claims MacLean, unleashed the deconstructionist forces that now occupy Congress, the White House, and the courts. A worthy companion to Jane Mayer's Dark Money (2017), MacLean's intense and extensive examination of the right-wing's rise to power is perhaps the best explanation to date of the roots of the political divide that threatens to irrevocably alter American government.--Haggas, Carol Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
MacLean (Freedom Is Not Enough) constructs an erudite, searing portrait of how the late political economist James McGill Buchanan (1919-2013) and his deep-pocketed conservative allies have reshaped-and undermined-American democracy. MacLean makes the convincing argument that an American "paloecapitalist" elite has sought to destroy our institutions in pursuit of their own "economic liberty." Focusing on Buchanan, winner of the 1986 Noble Prize in Economics and mastermind behind public choice theory, MacLean traces his career and influence, including over former Virginia governor Harry Byrd and Chile's former military ruler, Augusto Pinochet. In a thoroughly researched and gripping narrative, she exposes how Buchanan's strategies shaped trends in government in favor of "corporate dominance" and against the welfare state. His theories, according to MacLean, influenced the push for privatizing education. Moreover, the cadre of wealthy libertarians he inspired still persists in contemporary politics. MacLean examines the reach of this powerful group and its think tanks, such as Charles Koch's Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation. She has delivered another deeply important book that will interest general readers and scholars alike. Her work here is a feat of American intellectual and political history. Agent: Susan Rabiner, Susan Rabiner Literary. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
How American democracy is being destroyed by powerful libertarians.Focusing on Nobel Prize-winning economist James McGill Buchanan (1919-2013), whom Charles Koch funded and championed, MacLean (History and Public Policy/Duke Univ.; The American Women's Movement, 1945-2000: A Brief History with Documents, 2008, etc.) elaborates on the revelations about the Koch brothers' insidious, dangerous manipulation of American politics that has been presented forcefully by Jane Mayer in Dark Money (2016) and Daniel Schulman in Sons of Wichita (2014). Based on Buchanan's papers as well as published sources, MacLean creates a chilling portrait of an arrogant, uncompromising, and unforgiving man, stolid in his mission to "save capitalism from democracy." To Charles Koch, he seemed a kindred spirit. Buchanan believed that growth of government undermines individual freedom. Government overreach, he maintained, included public schools, the Postal Service, prisons, labor laws, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid for the poor, guarantees of voting rights, foreign aid, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the graduated income tax. Government's only role, Buchanan and his followers believe, "is to ensure the rule of law, guarantee social order, and provide for the national defense." MacLean traces Buchanan's career at several universitiesthe last was the fledging George Mason, which the Wall Street Journal called "the Pentagon of conservative academia"where he reigned over his own economics institutes, backed generously by wealthy libertarians; and his embrace by exclusive think tanks, such as the Mont Pelerin Society, the Hoover Institution, the Cato Institute, the Club for Growth, and the Heritage Foundation, among many other Koch-funded organizations. Besides influence at home, Buchanan helped design a constitution for the Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, a document that ensured constraint of majority power. MacLean offers a cogent yet disturbing analysis of libertarians' current efforts to rewrite the social contract and manipulate citizens' beliefse.g., by spreading "junk pseudo science" about climate change. An unsettling expos of the depth and breadth of the libertarian agenda. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.