If you've never heard of the Internet, Uber, Kickstarter, online education, No Child Left Behind, and the like, there's a lot to learn in this book. So very much of it is a very brief overview of everything that's happened in the last 10 years, including Al Gore's movie An Inconvenient Truth (Oh, had you already heard of that? Honestly.) Written almost entirely in two-paragraph sections that have almost no relationship to one another and based on "research" consisting of surveying some Gen Z students and sharing their self-reported values and thoughts as straight-up facts rather than as their impressions (e.g. "I'm more responsible than my peers." and "My generation cares more about X than other generations.") and without exploring any other kinds of data to support or complicate those impressions, this book feels extremely juvenile. It's also in a hilariously large font. I read it for a book discussion group at my university, but I can't go back to that group because I hated this book so.very.much. It's got an interesting title, but ultimately, if you've not been hiding under a rock, it's not helpful. The only things I actually learned were that Gen Z is more financially conservative than Millennials (which isn't surprising, but I hadn't thought about it) and that 41% of Gen Z students surveyed report going to religious services regularly--that statistic is quoted a LOT in the book. That's it. So now that you have that information, you don't need to read the book, which would be a waste of your time. Also, for the English teachers out there, this book concludes with one of your all-time favorite bad thesis statements: "Generation Z students are in many ways like every other generation before and yet vastly different at the same time." Whoa, they're different but the same! Same, but different. How this got published is beyond me. I'm also kind of sad this book completes my reading challenge for the year. On to a better book, stat.