Thomas Frank is the author of Pity the Billionaire, The Wrecking Crew, What’s the Matter with Kansas?, and Listen, Liberal (Scribe, 2016). A former columnist for The Wall Street Journal and Harper’s, Frank is the founding editor of The Baffler. He lives outside Washington, DC.
‘Over the past four decades, Frank argues, the Democrats have
embraced a new favorite constituency: the professional class ― the
doctors, lawyers, engineers, programmers, entrepreneurs, artists,
writers, financiers and other so-called creatives whose fetish for
academic credentials and technological innovation has infected the
party of the working class … For that class, Frank argues, income
and wealth inequality is not a problem but an inevitable
condition.’
*Washingon Post*
‘An astute dissection of contemporary Democratic politics that
demonstrates, cogently and at times acidly, how the party lost the
allegiance of blue-collar Americans.’
*Publisher’s Weekly*
‘A tough and thought-provoking look at what’s wrong with America …
Frank puts forth an impressive catalog of Democratic
disappointments, more than enough to make liberals
uncomfortable.’
*Booklist*
‘Thomas Frank’s new book Listen, Liberal documents a half-century
of work by the Democratic elite to belittle working people and
exile their concerns to the fringes of the party’s platform. If the
prevailing ideology of the Republican establishment is that of a
sneering aristocracy, Democratic elites are all too often the
purveyors of a smirking meritocracy that offers working people very
little.’
*Huffington Post*
‘As with Frank’s other books, Listen, Liberal is a piece of
contemporary history that tells us not only what the powerful are
up to, but how the trick is being pulled, with an admirable
deployment of irony … While his previous books are essentially
about devils being devils, this one shows how the angels have
fallen further than they realize.’
*Prospect*
‘A must-read.’
*Naomi Klein*
‘Thoroughly entertaining … An unabashed polemic … Frank delights in
skewering the sacred cows of coastal liberalism, including private
universities, bike paths, microfinance, the Clinton Foundation,
“well-meaning billionaires” and any public policy offering
“innovation” or “education” as a solution to inequality.’
*New York Times Book Review*
‘A must-read for entrepreneurs who want to understand what's
happening this year in politics and business.’
*Inc.com*
‘An impassioned howl of rage at what Frank sees as the Democratic
Party’s abandonment of the people it used to represent.’
*BBC Radio 4 'The World Tonight'*
‘[A] detailed, thoroughly researched polemic.’
*The Huffington Post*
‘In an astute dissection of contemporary Democratic politics …
Frank demonstrates, cogently and at times acidly, how the party
lost the allegiance of blue-collar Americans.’
*Publishers Weekly*
‘What makes Frank’s book new, different and important is its offer
of a compelling theory as to how and why the party of Jefferson,
Jackson and Roosevelt is now so unlikely to champion the economic
needs of everyday people … In such a looking-glass world, Listen,
Liberal is a desperately needed corrective.’
*History News Network*
‘Important … Engaging … An edgy — even disturbing — analysis of the
Democratic Party’s jilting of its traditional base.’
*The National Book Review*
‘Progressive commentator Thomas Frank says Democrats need to take a
good long look in the mirror if they want answers to why
blue-collar workers are feeling abandoned and even infuriated by
what used to be their party.’
*New York Post*
‘Democrats often use the fact that Republicans have gone off the
deep end to ignore their left flank, on the grounds that those
liberals have nowhere else to go politically. Listen, Liberal
contributes to the literature that expresses deep frustration with
that decision, the fuel for a revolt.’
*The Fiscal Times*
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