The Year That Broke America: An Immigration Crisis, a Terrorist Conspiracy, the Summer of Survivor, a Ridiculous Fake Billionaire, a Fight for Florida, and the 537 Votes That Changed Everything

The Year That Broke America: An Immigration Crisis, a Terrorist Conspiracy, the Summer of Survivor, a Ridiculous Fake Billionaire, a Fight for Florida, and the 537 Votes That Changed Everything

  • Downloads:8039
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-02-24 17:21:41
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Andrew Rice
  • ISBN:0062979825
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Reviews

Cara

The Year That Broke America is a welcome addition to a frankly overcrowded pantheon of books written about our current American culture because this is blessedly not about the period of 2016-2020。 The year 2000 was its own special dumpster fire, however。 I turned 11 that year and remember many of these major events and players from the nightly news, but of course didn’t understand too much until I got older。 The pacing really elevated the vast spread of material; Rice jumps in and out of many su The Year That Broke America is a welcome addition to a frankly overcrowded pantheon of books written about our current American culture because this is blessedly not about the period of 2016-2020。 The year 2000 was its own special dumpster fire, however。 I turned 11 that year and remember many of these major events and players from the nightly news, but of course didn’t understand too much until I got older。 The pacing really elevated the vast spread of material; Rice jumps in and out of many subjects but manages to make a lengthy read actually go by pretty quickly。 I especially liked reading about Janet Reno, because I only associated her with Will Ferrell’s impression of her on SNL (which hilariously gets a mention in this book。) It was also interesting learning more about various people and the nonsense they were up to--or would be up to。 Bit foreboding seeing so many burgeoning politicians and celebrities who would make news much later on。 It is truly cringe-inducing and terrifying thinking about all the problems we have now and how their repercussions will affect our country in twenty years’ time。 Thanks, NetGalley! 。。。more