Money and Class in America

Lewis Lapham author Thomas Frank editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:OR Books

Published:18th Oct '18

Should be back in stock very soon

Money and Class in America cover

  • Author interviews on broadcast media and in print, Harper's magazine coverage especially likely
  • Likely serialization of Tom Frank's introduction in the Guardian
  • Extensive review coverage anticipated
  • Promotion, including advertising in and subscriber mailing through Lapham's Quarterly
  • bound galleys available
  • Extensively expanded and revised, with a new foreword by Thomas Frank

    In the United States, happiness and wealth are often regarded as synonymous. Consumerism, greed, and the insatiable desire for more are American obsessions. In the native tradition of Twain, Veblen, and Mencken, the editor of Lapham's Quarterly here examines our fascination with the ubiquitous green goddess.

    Focusing on the wealthy sybarites of New York City, whom Lewis H. Lapham has been able to observe firsthand in their natural habitat, Money and Class in America is a caustic, and often hilarious, portrait of a segment of the American population who, in the thirty years since the book was originally written, have become only further removed—both in terms of wealth and social awareness—from everyone else.

    Praise for Money and Class in America

    Money and Class is, on every page, a pleasure to read. Lapham’s … sentences simply radiate elegance.- Thomas Frank, author, What’s the Matter with Kansas?

    Praise for Lewis Lapham:

    "Without doubt our greatest satirist—elegant, honorable, learned and fair. I love reading him." —Kurt Vonnegut

    "Lewis Lapham—born of Mark Twain and H. L. Mencken—is the most provocative and engaging essayist in the country." —George Plimpton

    "An elegant collection of sardonic and satirical essays . . . Lapham is a moralist in the tradition of Gore Vidal." —Godfrey Hodgson, Independent

    "An elegant descant of despair about the state of American culture and political life." — Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph

    "In this aptly titled collection of twenty-five exquisite essays, Lewis Lapham depicts an ugly America. These dour yet witty ruminations spare no one and nothing." — Johanna Berkman, New York Times Book Review

    "Lapham refuses to cozy down to his audience, much less cozy up to its ignorance and prejudices. Nor will he surrender a jot of his wit, erudition and style." —Los Angeles Times

    "Lapham's portraits of his country are astute and his dry wit as sharp as a knife." —Times

    "These dour yet witty ruminations spare no one and nothing...." —Johanna Berkman, The New York Times Book Review

    "This is a book that must be read. If you can't stomach the philosophy, just lie back and enjoy the prose." — Marina Benjamin, Evening Standard

    "We should honour and respect Lapham, and all his works, and buy this book . . . Like Gore Vidal and Christopher Hitchens, in whose ballpark he is worthy to play, the predicament is of the civilised man who has become a relentless chronicler of the awfulness of American politics." — Nicholas Lezard, Guardian

    "[Lapham is] a latter-day Mencken or Twain, our last best hope for literary journalism, or any kind of journalism that isn't lazy and shamelessly reverential of money." — John Cook, Washington City Pages

    ISBN: 9781944869892

    Dimensions: unknown

    Weight: unknown

    352 pages