book data
96 ratings,
3.27
average rating, 36 reviews
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published
August 5th 2008
by Crown
details
Kindle Edition, 288 pages
asin
B001ESCOQA
description
Americans are as safe, well fed, securely sheltered, long-lived, free, and healthy as any human beings who have ever lived on the planet. But we are d…more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 309)
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1 star (4)
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avg 3.27
editions: all | this edition
editions: all | this edition
Read in September, 2008
What would happen if you let Andy Rooney off his meds?
Grumble grumble....kids today and their blogging and the road rage and the short attention spans and the no religion and the sex and the drugs and who turned off Matlock blahdeblahzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
There is a book that needs to be written about the modern malaise and why we're so prosperous and yet so miserable. This is not that book. This book is not even six degrees of separation from that book. This is a jumb...more
Grumble grumble....kids today and their blogging and the road rage and the short attention spans and the no religion and the sex and the drugs and who turned off Matlock blahdeblahzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
There is a book that needs to be written about the modern malaise and why we're so prosperous and yet so miserable. This is not that book. This book is not even six degrees of separation from that book. This is a jumb...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommended to Brian by:
NPR
The thesis of this book is that American culture is in the midst of a crisis brought on by narcissism, a crisis marked by belligerence, phoniness, and isolation. Why else would people yell into their cell phones in public places, or bellow obscenities at the ref while seated next to a kid at a football game? For this cultural crisis, author Dick Meyer blames the ethos of the sixties gone too far -- social liberation that has freed us too absolutely from the bonds of community and good manners....more
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Read in August, 2008
As I started reading this book I thought, wow! yeah, that's why I get so upset with Americans! Then I kept reading and felt guilty and upset with myself because I too have a lot of the annoying American habbits. Then about half way through the book I got really bored. So bored that every time I picked up the book and started reading I'd pass right out and have a good long nap. (Man, those were some good naps) I didn't finish this book before it was due back to the library. I couldn't renew ...more
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Read in October, 2008
to be perfectly honest, I didn't finish this book ... I started reading it the day after attending the NLDS game where the Dodgers advanced to the NLCS and I could clearly see idiots outlined in Mr. Meyer's book by recalling my experience in the cheap seats the previous night. but after a few days I got annoyed at reading about how everyone in American sucks or thinks something else sucks so I stopped.
how I understood Mr/ Meyer's "solution" to America's problem, is to rese...more
how I understood Mr/ Meyer's "solution" to America's problem, is to rese...more
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Read in October, 2009
6 stars. 7, 8, 9. Excellent doubleplus good.
A cousin to Derb's We Are Doomed, less pessimistic but just as sobering about the modern world. Explains why "Real Simple" magazine isn't, why Bowling Alone is a real problem, and why David Byrne was prescient when he asked, "My god! What have I done?"
I imagine the book's critics, if any, point out that it's simply another "Life is the journey, not the destination" book, but even if that's true, ...more
A cousin to Derb's We Are Doomed, less pessimistic but just as sobering about the modern world. Explains why "Real Simple" magazine isn't, why Bowling Alone is a real problem, and why David Byrne was prescient when he asked, "My god! What have I done?"
I imagine the book's critics, if any, point out that it's simply another "Life is the journey, not the destination" book, but even if that's true, ...more
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Read in January, 2010
This was an excellent book. Dick Meyer has tapped into a strong undercurrent of discontent within American society that most of us are not aware of but feel the effects of all the time. Americans are more interested in living their lives vicariously through reality-based TV shows and of buying bigger and bigger houses and bigger and bigger cars but they don't understand the angst which drives them to behave this way. Our communities are becoming less and less cohesive because we fail to make ...more
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Read in October, 2008
This started out well. It was interesting and engaging. The author made a lot of salient points. And then, well, I just completely lost interest. It struck me as an old man's rant that came down to the simple point, "Americans hate themselves, because they hate modern life." Great, thanks for the newsflash.
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I saw an interview with the author, but since it was on The Colbert Report, and Colbert just interrupts.. I don't really know what it's about. But I'm intruiged. I just hope it's not as snobby as Cult of the Amatuer.
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Read in July, 2009
Took me ages to read this as I would get through maybe a few pages before I would have to stop and think about what I had just read. Some of the ideas and the implications of what I had just read would take me the rest of the night to thoroughly work out in my head and apply to personal experience. A lot of the book reads like common sense but at the same time it's stuff that is a helpful reminder. It's also nice to have the author articulate nagging things that are on the tip of my tongue but t...more
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Read in September, 2008
Tell me something I don't know.
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Each of us has had this type of “what has happened to this country” conversation – and Meyer’s does a good job at putting it all together and with laying out suggestions to get us back on track. The challenge - just like any other road to recovery you gotta really really want to change before you’re able to take that first step. "Dick Meyer has done the impossible — he diagnoses the self-loathing, moral confusion and ennui that infect supersized America without hectoring us and ...more
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Read in November, 2008
If you regularly respond to newsman and pundits that you hear on the telly, hurling epitaphs and wondering if everyone has gone quite mad -this is the book for you! A really well-written book that makes a lot of sense in this senseless world. May not make things any better, but it was refreshing to read something that was fresh, honest and made some sense for a change.
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recommends it for:
patient readers, lovers of politics
OK don't get me wrong on this one, I loved the idea of it-- a book about how we don't trust our government and why and how we can make it better but I just couldn't get through it. I'm not used to book without plots and I got bored very easily with this book. Furthermore, I cannot read about politics as hard as I try.
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Interesting book about why we hate us (our culture). His thought---our increased balkanization resulting from the turmoil of the 60s and the increased diversity of the US coupled with a lot of the alienation, and plain rudeness, that all our technology has allowed to flourish. Thought-provoking.
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I saw this author on The Colbert Report and thought his premise for the book was intriguing: everyone in American society hates some aspect of our culture, whether it is the lack of shame, the loss of civility and personal communication, or the increasing debauchery in our media, but no one will take ownership of American culture. In a sense, we have all become counter-culturists. But as I read the book, I got tired of the complaining, negative tone. I'm sure at some point he presents his soluti...more
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Read in February, 2009
What a great eye-catching title! Dutifully I slogged my way through the book hoping to find some answer. Mostly I agree with a lot of the answers Mr. Meyer offered. He just took a long winding road to get there.
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I greatly enjoyed this book. It's true that the book offers little in the way of solutions but then, most Americans would have trouble even describing the problem.
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Read in December, 2008
This is an argument that is one that I make regularly, yet somehow the book never came together for me. A lot of what is wrong, but very little on the things that can make it better.
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Read in October, 2009
I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE this book--the best work of cultural commentary I've ever, EVER read. Highly recommended. Give it 10 stars!! if that were possible.
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Read in December, 2008
I admit it, I timed out on this book. While the author did have some provocative thoughts here and there, the cynicism and negativity that he was complaining about was so pervasive that the book became unbearable. Talk about literary irony... I'm starting to understand why the one reviewer (?) compared Meyer to Andy Rooney off his meds--I couldn't even make it to the supposed "solution" to remedy why we hate us at the end. Nothing was safe from his acerbic tongue and I was left thi...more
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