What Unites Us
Dan Rather and Elias Kirschner
Algonquin Books
Nonfiction, Autobiography/Essays/Politics
Themes: Cross-Genre
****+
Description
Since its founding, America has been a land of many faiths and ideas, of diverse people and diverse viewpoints, of conflicts and cooperation. In recent years, our nation has been tested in ways it rarely, if ever, has encountered - ways that could permanently alter, perhaps end, the great American experiment. Noted reporter Dan Rather reflects on eight decades of life and six decades of journalism in a series of essays exploring the country he loves and how it has dealt with its own shifting self-image, not to mention how it arrived at the current murky crossroads where it now stands.
Review
Like many Americans, I've spent the last few years struggling to understand what is happening to my country, how things could veer so rapidly off course because
of the whims of the few and the apathy of the many. Rather, too, seems to be struggling, though his reflections offer some thin hope for the future as he discusses
conflicts the country has weathered before. He draws from the experiences of his long life and notable career to explore many aspects of patriotism as it used to
be, as it should be - aspects that stand in sharp contrast to the toxic brand of nationalism being bandied about in the name of "patriotism" today. From a childhood
in Houston to the halls of power in Washington, from years of war and scandal to years of peace and prosperity, from personal failures to personal triumphs, Rather
paints a picture of troubling trends with long roots in our often-whitewashed (in many ways) past, yet with glimmers of hope around the edges. I do hope his
ultimate optimism proves prophetic, though I can't help look at the overall trend and seemingly-deliberate sabotage of key aspects of our historical resiliency -
our crumbling educational system, the increasing and overwhelming voice of money over people in government, the assault on science and the very existence of facts,
demonization of diversity, and more - and wonder if this appeal to our better selves is ultimately too little, too late.
(Incidentally, for those none of you keeping track, by my calculations this is my 1500th "live" review. Technically, I've written more, but I was set back when I
culled reviews of no-longer-available books.)