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A review by adamrshields
Fault Lines: A History of the United States Since 1974 by Julian E. Zelizer, Kevin M. Kruse
4.0
Short Thoughts: This is a good, very readable historical overview of 1974 to 2016. The framing is about the increasing polarization brought about by four fault lines, income inequality, racial division, changing gender roles and changing understanding of LGBT and other issues of sexuality.
Even though the framing is on those fault lines, the main focus is telling the story of of the era to provide context for today. From what I understand this is roughly based on the author's undergrad history course at Princeton. I think there can be disagreement with where the authors start. The fault lines cited certainly didn't start in 1974. Racial and gender issues were definitely earlier. Sexual mores have long been changing. Income inequality did start spiking around that time, but did fuel previous political issues. But 1974 was a reasonable starting place.
I listened to this on audiobook, there is not an audiobook edition on goodreads yet. The narration was generally good, but the narrator kept sort of doing impressions of well known politicians that were close enough to be annoying but not close enough to really be accurate. I would have preferred straight reading of the quotes.
My longer thoughts are on my blog at http://bookwi.se/fault-lines/
Even though the framing is on those fault lines, the main focus is telling the story of of the era to provide context for today. From what I understand this is roughly based on the author's undergrad history course at Princeton. I think there can be disagreement with where the authors start. The fault lines cited certainly didn't start in 1974. Racial and gender issues were definitely earlier. Sexual mores have long been changing. Income inequality did start spiking around that time, but did fuel previous political issues. But 1974 was a reasonable starting place.
I listened to this on audiobook, there is not an audiobook edition on goodreads yet. The narration was generally good, but the narrator kept sort of doing impressions of well known politicians that were close enough to be annoying but not close enough to really be accurate. I would have preferred straight reading of the quotes.
My longer thoughts are on my blog at http://bookwi.se/fault-lines/