Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Life After Cars: Freeing Ourselves from the Tyranny of the Automobile

Rate this book
NATIONAL BESTSELLER

From the hosts of The War on Cars podcast, a searing indictment of how cars ruin everything—and what we can do to fight back


When the very first cars rolled off production lines, they were a technological marvel, predicted to make life easier and better for all Americans; yet a hundred years later, that dream is running on empty.

Instead of unbounded freedom, the never-ending proliferation of automobiles has delivered a host of costs, among them the demolition of our neighborhoods, towns, and cities to make way for car infrastructure; an epidemic of violent death; countless hours lost in traffic; isolation from our fellow human beings; and the ongoing destruction of the natural world. Globally, SUVs alone now emit more carbon than the nations of Germany, South Korea, or Japan.

That’s why we need Life After Cars. Through historical records, revealing interviews, and unflinching statistics, Sarah Goodyear and Doug Gordon, hosts of the podcast The War on Cars, and former host Aaron Naparstek unpack the scale of damage that cars cause, the forces that have created our current crisis and are invested in perpetuating it, and the way that the fight for better transportation is deeply linked to the fight for a more equitable and just society.

Cars as we know them today are unsustainable—but there is hope. Life After Cars will arm readers with the tools they need to implement real, transformative change, from simply raising awareness to taking a stand at public forums. It’s past time to radically rethink—and shrink—society’s collective relationship with the automobile. Together, let’s create a better Life After Cars.

Audible Audio

First published January 1, 2025

202 people are currently reading
2551 people want to read

About the author

Sarah Goodyear

5 books4 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
323 (55%)
4 stars
193 (32%)
3 stars
61 (10%)
2 stars
8 (1%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 118 reviews
Profile Image for Sunny Lu.
1,002 reviews6,652 followers
November 17, 2025
Oh the radical notion that cars should serve us instead of us serving cars! Endlessly feeding these gas-guzzling death machines for the sake of a convenience that actually isn’t all that convenient—and in fact is deeply inconvenient and expensive to keep up—is impossible to sustain and we need to seriously confront that fact. This book addresses everything from “bikelash” to the “I love visiting Europe and being in walkable cities, BUT this isn’t Amsterdam” bullshit head on. Opposing cars requires us to all radically change our perceptions of the world and what the world could be and look like. This book is an excellent synthesis of the best arguments against cars and the shoddy arguments for cars that people have, and references many of the classic and contemporary urbanist bibles, from The Powerbroker to When Driving Is Not An Option. A primer against cars and for the future!

Listened to 90% of this book while riding the bus, my bike, and walking around of course

4.5
Profile Image for Terra.
61 reviews4 followers
November 18, 2025
A tad repetitive but overall I’m a huge car hater so I loved it LOL. Communities deserve good, safe, and affordable public transportation.
Profile Image for Harrison.
146 reviews8 followers
July 21, 2025
I haven't listened to the authors' podcast, but this is an area of thought I've had plenty of exposure to. As such, not much here is new to me, not even most of the specific anecdotes cited. But there is undeniably power to evidence at volume, and this feels like as good a primer as any to one of the major ways humanity is destroying the planet and themselves. It's not data-heavy (at least doesn't feel that way while reading, though once you get to the appendices at the end it does seem like a lot of numbers), but it is practical and approachable (though only to a certain extent, as obviously a book with chapters like "Cars Are Killing Us" and "Cars Ruin Society" isn't intended to convert those on the polar opposite side of the issue); it's not as in-depth and academic as a research paper but that means it's relatively short and digestible.

While it certainly leans toward the strictly educational side of nonfiction, it is often beautifully written, with certain lines that felt genuinely poetic to me, especially in the aforementioned chapters that are understandably the most urgent and emotional. And that's needed, too, because I think beauty in prose can be persuasive in its own right, balancing the statistics and anecdotes with distinctive writing that reminds one of the humans behind the text. I would quote some examples here, but I'm following the law of eARCs to the letter.

I appreciate too that it dedicates a section to a call-to-action and the practicalities of making a change. I know that people prominent in this pop-urbanism space are sometimes criticized for laying out issues while not offering solutions or pointing their audiences in the right direction. But maybe the answers should be obvious, and educating/informing people is half the battle (which might be why the final part of this book is the shortest). While vast aspects of the issue are much bigger than the individual, I do feel that people have become too jaded against the idea of individual responsibility and action, as if it's become cringeworthy to believe in the effects of small changes (or the ability to inspire big changes through the collective sum of individual actions). I think it's something to do with the fact that certain generations were taught that they could save the world if they turned the tap off while brushing their teeth and reduced, reused, recycled, and yet despite those efforts things are still getting worse. So they resign themselves to the spiral of destruction, as if it's silly to even try.

While at university, I took a course on climate change led by a brilliant biology professor who specialized in wildlife and habitat conservation. He told a story about how, while living in a village in his home country of India, he managed to get so many people to use reusable bags that the local shops stopped ordering plastic bags altogether. I think this is an anecdote that a lot of people would scoff at. On its face, it's too feel-good, even naive. What difference does it make to the world that one tiny village in India has stopped using plastic bags? But maybe it means that a few fewer bags will be littered. And maybe that means that a few fewer local animals choke and die because they've tried to eat plastic rubbish. I fail to understand the unfashionability of changing yourself even if you believe you can't change the world.

With that digression out of the way, thank you to Thesis and NetGalley for the eARC.
Profile Image for avocet.
23 reviews1 follower
January 16, 2026
an interesting primer to the myriad ways cars harm our cities and selves, but not as good at living up to its premise of imagining a life AFTER cars. shockingly low on public transit content, and immediately fell prey to the trap of the classic northamerican idolatry of european urbanism (the Political Will chapter discussing only ghent, paris, and emeryville was . telling.) 3.5/5
Profile Image for Sofia.
485 reviews2 followers
December 1, 2025
What is more lovely than a nonfiction who makes you pause and think? To challenge your beliefs a bit, to just push you to consider what you thought was certainty?

This is a book about cars, bikes, walking and transportation in general. I think that the authors very cleverly frame the argument to be about keeping more kids safe and healthy. I think there is a lot of good information about bikes and why we need to design cities to be less car centric. I was also stunned to learn that sidewalk skirts (the gentle slopes from the pedestrian walkways to the road at crossings) are a relatively new invention.
12 reviews3 followers
December 28, 2025
certified banger. both a great book for people new to the anti-car movement and well-read car haters. talks broadly about every element of the harm cars cause, and makes a great call to action.
Profile Image for Bailey Webster.
34 reviews1 follower
January 27, 2026
Rounding up to 5 stars. As someone who’s been engaged for years now in urbanist content, read many of the books cited in Life After Cars, and is a long-time listener of the pod, almost none of the information in this book was new to me. However, I did think it was well-written and provides clear and succinct summaries of:
- how car dominance grew over the 20th century

- how cars ruin childhood - cars make the world increasingly dangerous for children and take away what little independence the once had.

- how cars ruin nature - car infrastructure destroys vast amounts of natural landscapes and wildlife habitats, and cars cause extreme amounts of pollution, poisoning all living things and exacerbating climate change. Cars also violently kill a horrific number of animals and degrade their lives in countless ways, including isolating populations and decreasing genetic diversity.

- how cars are killing us - over 40,000 people are killed in vehicle crashes every year, just in the United States alone. Another 5.6 million are injured severely enough in automobile crashes to require medical attention. And this doesn’t count how car pollution increases occurrences of asthma, premature births, cognitive delays in children, cardiovascular disease, and more. They. Are. Killing. Us.

- how cars ruin society - cars isolate us and degrade our social fabrics, as well as increasing our willingness to act with and accept violence towards others.

- how cars are unjust - cars reinforce “the power of those who are already powerful. They impoverish those who are already poor, disproportionately endanger the most vulnerable among us, and widen the already yawning gulf that separates the haves and have-nots in our society.” Cars have weakened our 4th Amendment rights in giving police enormous discretionary power in allowing them to stop and search essentially anyone so long as they are in a car.

Not to mention, 1/3 of all Americans cannot drive and are thus prevented from fully participating in and accessing our communities we have designed entirely around car travel.

Lastly, Life After Cars helps us envision a safer, more just, and greener world: a life after cars. And it provides examples of the hard work people are doing around the world to achieve these goals, what has been effective, and provides advice to all who would like to see this world.

This book is a good introduction or primer to those who may be interested in learning more about how the status quo of car dependency harms us all and what we can do about it.
Profile Image for Mark Fajet.
204 reviews6 followers
October 30, 2025
At times, this book left me feeling incredibly sad. At other times, I was seething with rage having to take breaks from reading it. At other times, I was very happy and hopeful for the positive changes being made around the world. I think most of the book focuses on the history of a car centric culture and the problems it causes rather than what an actual Life After Cars would look like, but it’s necessary context. I’m also unsure how much more they could add without getting repetitive (talking about other cities that have done similar things) or venturing into science fiction.

I loved the book. Lots of statistics and quotes and citations for everything.

In the introduction, they talk about how this book is for more people than the ones who are already very anti-car, but that leaves me so curious on how it would be received by people less biased than I am. They do little “both sidesing” of the argument, even going as far as to say that they don’t feel the need to as the status quo, media, and auto industry do enough to convince people about the benefits of cars. For me, that’s not a problem and the authors do what they set out to do. They created a book for people who are anti-car to slightly skeptical of cars to go further down that path, take action, and make a better world.

I wish the book left me more hopeful. It got its message across that change is possible, but it also showed how hard it can be to achieve, even using small or dense cities as examples. Reading this while very far from the downtown of Miami while the government, as far as I can tell, is 100% committed to the auto centric society and seemingly little investment in public transit (although I’ve seen some improvements), the hope for my city is very low, but I’ll do my part.

I will use this book to be more annoying and cite it constantly. Spoiler alert (not really): the book even has some calls to action at the end where one of them is to “preach to the unconverted” and you know I will be doing just that.

Also, I’ve never listened to their podcast, but maybe I need to start.
Profile Image for Seamus Meagher.
10 reviews
January 17, 2026
Not as good as walkable cities by Speck but still effective in discussing the issues in a car dominated world.
Profile Image for Elle.
117 reviews
January 15, 2026
I knew a lot of the information already, but I think the arguments were presented really well and the call to action was especially inspiring
22 reviews
January 18, 2026
I hate how pervasive car culture has become, especially on how it shapes where we live and in turn, how we live our lives. Despite all their real and supposed benefits, cars have caused a net loss to society. Giving this book 5 stars just based on that ethos.

Quite enjoyed the anecdotal and scientific references. Would highly recommend.
Profile Image for Rex Tai.
19 reviews1 follower
December 11, 2025
A very necessary read for most, but not particularly for me. I already am a paid Patreon subscriber to the War on Cars podcast so this book (which I had signed by the authors at their release day event in NYC) is just a best hits compilation of their podcast episodes that treat nearly every topic addressed in this book with more detail and highlighting key regulators/activists/academics working in that given area. This is a problem of my own making being in the transportation justice space, since the arguments against car dependency have remained the same for decades; the principal differences between why street transformations have been enacted in Europe & Asia but not anywhere to the same extent in North America are a matter of political will and consumer indoctrination.

Largely a rehash of 2023’s Carmageddon: How Cars Make Life Worse and What to Do About It by Daniel Knowles, the two most effective new arguments I see here draw from Paul Donald’s book Traffication regarding the insidious ways that automobile ubiquity is destroying nature (in particular, how highways cut off natural habitats and breeding grounds to create isolated animal communities experiencing declining biodiversity due to inbreeding and such shocking outcomes as infertile single-testicle mountain lions in Los Angeles) as well as the chapter on racist enforcement of traffic laws creating ever more effective legal technologies and regimes to police and curtail free movement of black Americans. Worth reading these chapters at a minimum for how succinctly the authors illustrate these casualties of motonormativity. If you want to go beyond succinct, however, you can’t do better than becoming a War on Cars podcast subscriber to fully immerse yourself in 100+ episodes of detailed interviews bringing in insights from countless different disciplines and countries all aligned in the global fight for a greener, healthier, freer, and just future.
5 reviews
December 31, 2025
A really good collection of data and stories that references a lot of other popular resources in the field; probably perfect for someone who is getting into urbanism/transit/biking/policy stuff, but not quite for me. Side note, I got to see them on their book tour and had a blast. Also if you need a poncho for biking, use their podcast code for 20% off or something like that!
Profile Image for Joey Anderson.
6 reviews
December 31, 2025
Accessible read and presents lots of information about the problems a car base society has created and just how we may get ourselves out of this mess.
Profile Image for Sarah Jensen.
2,092 reviews189 followers
May 25, 2025
Book Review: Life After Cars: Freeing Ourselves from the Tyranny of the Automobile
By Sarah Goodyear, Doug Gordon, and Aaron Naparstek

Life After Cars is a timely and incisive critique of the automobile’s destructive dominance in modern society. Drawing from their expertise as hosts of The War on Cars podcast, the authors deliver a meticulously researched indictment of car-centric infrastructure, exposing its social, environmental, and economic toll. The book is structured into three compelling sections: “How We Got Here” (a history of car culture and resistance), “How Cars Ruin Everything” (detailing impacts on childhood, public health, equity, and nature), and “How We Get Free” (solutions like urban design reforms and grassroots activism).

Key Strengths:

-Interdisciplinary Rigor: Blends historical analysis, data (e.g., SUV emissions surpassing entire nations), and case studies (like the “bike bus” initiative) to underscore systemic flaws.
-Action-Oriented: Beyond critique, the book offers tangible steps for advocacy, from policy shifts to community organizing.
-Narrative Power: The prose is accessible yet scholarly, balancing urgency with hope for a post-car future.

Notable Themes:

-The paradox of cars as symbols of freedom that ultimately isolate and endanger.
-The intersection of transportation justice with broader struggles for equity.
-Innovative alternatives, such as reclaiming urban spaces for people-centric design.

How I would describe this book:

- A galvanizing manifesto for anyone who’s ever felt trapped in traffic—literally or politically.
- Reveals how cars hijacked the American dream—and how we can take it back.
- Essential reading for urbanists and environmentalists, and advocates for a more connected world.

Acknowledgments:
Thank you to Portfolio Publishers for providing an advance review copy. This book is a vital contribution to the discourse on sustainable futures, and its insights will resonate with scholars, policymakers, and activists alike.

Final Recommendation: Life After Cars is a provocative, evidence-based call to action. Its blend of sharp analysis and pragmatic vision makes it indispensable for reimagining mobility—and society—beyond the automobile.

Reviewer’s Note: The “bike bus” concept (a communal, safe cycling cohort for children) exemplifies the book’s creativity in rethinking norms. Such examples elevate the text from critique to inspiration.
Profile Image for Pond.
42 reviews
November 16, 2025
Honestly I bought this book already onboard with its message - car primacy sucks. So I was partly hoping to hear new insights, and partly expecting an enjoyable agreeable listen. Turns out I didn’t get much of either.

The thing is: the book’s tone, in many sections, is really hostile (to cars/car-loving people), to the point ridiculing arguments on the other side rather than thoughtfully engaging with them. To illustrate the point: in the audio book, when Sarah Goodyear is reading quotes from men advocating for cars, she would lower her voice to make a mocking male tone. It makes me wonder whether the people/things they so vehemently portray as evil has another side that should be more carefully considered. There’s also a lot of big existential words and passages that just felt overdone. I think all this anger and passion is deserved, but it lacks the taste and nuance I want. If you’re someone who enjoys reading angry facebook posts, you might enjoy this. I don’t.

In terms of content: the arguments will be familiar to people who’ve thought a bit about urbanism: cars kill a lot of people, influences destructive city designs, bad for the environment, etc.
Profile Image for Almudena.
276 reviews
December 17, 2025
I’ve read 106 books this year, and this one might be the best.

THIS IS IT. The topics touched on in this book are exactly what has been circling through my head about how society functions for years — everything from how car-centric societies are lonelier and less safe, to how third spaces are essential for creating community (and how those have been decimated over decades to make space for parking structures), to how public transport allows for connectivity among people and different communities, and how childhoods are becoming more isolated because kids have to be driven everywhere. I’m going to be referencing this book for the rest of my life. The authors do a stellar job explaining the effects of motor vehicles on society through data, human-centered stories, and comparative studies from all around the world. I can’t wait to listen to their podcast.

I hate cars. I hate what they symbolize and how we use them (yes, I know this is hypocritical because I just got a car, but we still live in a car-centric society, so choices are often limited). I love cities and public transport, and above all, living in places where I can walk and meet people out on the street.

This book was life-changing because it put everything into words. Thank you. Thank you.
Profile Image for Michael Howley.
513 reviews3 followers
November 12, 2025
This is a good handbook for people interested in the whys of transportation reform, but not really useful for me personally or others in the space who are already decently informed. Nearly every single case study, historical lesson, or scientific paper was something I had already encountered from being online. Which unfortunately also means this is very Euro-American focused, with one section about Japan. At the very end of the conclusion, they mention someone who started Critical Mass rides in Nairobi to effect change - where was the writeup of THAT?!
28 reviews
December 18, 2025
Honestly more of a 4 for me, but rating it 5 to boost its reach because I want a lot of people to read it. Nothing in this was really mind blowing to me, but that’s because I’ve consumed a LOT of urbanist content over the past 7 years. For the average person, I think it would be very eye-opening.

This book did talk about success stories, but I wish it was more future-oriented. 80% of it focused on the current state of our cities and all the problems cars cause. Would’ve liked it to live up to its title and examine Life After Cars.
5 reviews4 followers
January 24, 2026
Rounded up from a 3.5 because there are a lot of important ideas here and I think it’s a very accessible text. Nothing here felt incredibly new and I wish they had engaged a bit more with an alternative vision — I found the lack of mention of public transit a bit odd and would have loved to delve more into what might enable a car free suburban/rural life which I think is the more challenging question.
761 reviews11 followers
December 3, 2025
I agree with their goals, but this book never quite clicked with me. Chapter 9's section about Ghent's update was most interesting as it showed how a city looked at overall changes and implemented them - that was impressive and informative. Otherwise, meh, but I hope others like it better and are inspired to do something about it.
Profile Image for Gnaeus Agricola.
18 reviews
December 23, 2025
Fantastic! While understandably America-centric, many of the lessons apply everywhere car dependency dominates. I particularly enjoyed this book as it made me feel like there are others who care about these issues and others who go further than I do to make our society better, more sustainable, and more inclusive for all regardless of the transportation one chooses or prefers.
Profile Image for Kimik Gibson.
83 reviews7 followers
November 7, 2025
I'm a patreon supporter of The War on Cars Podcast, so my 5 star rating will be a bit biased, but I really enjoyed this. It's comprehensive and will be engaging and informative for those who are just waking up to just how badly car-cenrric culture sucks and how we can move beyond it as a community, a city, and as a world.
Profile Image for Sean.
97 reviews5 followers
January 20, 2026
Life After Cars restates the arguments for a human-centric urban environment with accessible and concise language that might offer the urbanism-curious reader the nudge they need to go deeper. While offering nothing particularly new for anyone already engaged in urbanist spaces, it still provides a valuable reminder that better things are possible and that you, yes you, reader, can make a positive impact.
Profile Image for Jake C.
34 reviews1 follower
January 21, 2026
Cars are horrible for every living thing on planet Earth and this book does a great job showing why and how we can change the world for the better. It would involve industrialized countries, like America, following Europe's example to prioritize pedestrians and bikers. Not a lot of hope, but Planet Earth is worth fighting for so why not try?
Profile Image for Zach Forstot.
42 reviews1 follower
December 21, 2025
A lot of this is old hat for someone who is steeped in urbanism, but it is still a refreshing read through it’s local stories
Displaying 1 - 30 of 118 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.