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On Paradise Drive: How We Live Now (And Always Have) in the Future Tense Hardcover – May 25, 2004
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- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSimon & Schuster
- Publication dateMay 25, 2004
- Dimensions5.86 x 1.03 x 8.74 inches
- ISBN-100743227387
- ISBN-13978-0743227384
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From Publishers Weekly
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From Bookmarks Magazine
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
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From The Washington Post
Brooks's new book, On Paradise Drive, has a more ambitious scope than Bobos in Paradise. This time, Brooks is examining all of America -- all of its middle class, anyway -- and he's reaching for a larger theme that will explain how its various subcultures relate to one another. Unfortunately, he never finds one.
That Brooks has not lost his penchant for bemused social taxonomy is amply demonstrated in the book's first chapter, which takes us on an imaginary drive that begins in a prototypical urban core. We travel from the downtown "urban hipster zone," characterized by "a stimulating mixture of low sexuality and high social concern," to the "crunchy" suburbs, where "all the sports teams are really bad, except those involving Frisbees." Then it's on to the pricier inner-ring suburbs, once inhabited by the Republican WASP elite but now taken over by the meritocratic elite, who babble at dinner parties about "the merits and demerits of Corian countertops." Farther on, we find the strip-mall-laden immigrant enclaves and, past these, the postwar suburbs that sometimes seem "shaped more by golf than by war or literature or philosophy." Finally, we reach our terminus at the "new exurbs" inhabited by Patio Man and Realtor Mom, who live in "a 3,200 square-foot middle-class home built to look like a 7,000 square-foot starter palace for the nouveaux riche." It's a beguiling trip, but where are we going?
In the next chapter, Brooks introduces the promising theme that class and cultural warfare never reach a boiling point because America's multiple tribes are only dimly aware of one another's existence. "There is no one single elite in America," Brooks explains. "Hence, there is no definable establishment to be oppressed by and rebel against. Everybody can be an aristocrat within his own Olympus." Whereas the Greeks advised, "Know thyself," the inhabitants of America's "self-reinforcing clique communities . . . live by the maxim 'Overrate thyself.' " This is an amusing and intellectually provocative point, and I briefly looked forward to Brooks taking the rest of the book to elaborate on it.
But he doesn't develop the theme, choosing instead to move on to the more banal point that Americans are full of restless energy and spiritual striving, sometimes expressed through the "mystical transubstantiation" of consumerism, which isn't so much about having what you can afford now as it is about getting rich by working hard so you can have something more luxurious in the future. "We are motivated by the Paradise Spell," Brooks concludes, "by the feeling that there is some glorious destiny just ahead." This sentiment could animate a perfectly acceptable high school class valedictorian speech or, with a few more laughs thrown in, a passable Lake Wobegon monologue by Garrison Keillor. But though he dresses it up with learned citations from many non-obvious sources -- the German theologian Jurgen Moltmann, the radical socialist Leon Samson, etc., etc. -- Brooks simply can't make Jay Gatsby's infatuation with the green light at the end of the pier feel like a fresh new expression of the American character.
Brooks's earlier book and the insightful social and political commentary in many of his magazine essays have led us to expect he would have something more original to say. (In the Times column he is still finding his voice, but it certainly isn't this bland.) I must also confess creeping impatience with his heavy reliance on satirical composites to make serious sociological points. Even Tom Wolfe, who is better at this than anyone else alive, leavens his hyperbolic generalizations with narratives about real people -- in his nonfiction, anyway. In the introduction, Brooks says it is necessary to "speak in parables, composites, and archetypes, for the personality of a people, as much as the personality of an individual, is a mysterious, changing thing." But a little of this goes a long way. When, halfway through the book, Brooks introduces a succession of composite-driven chapters with the aside "Sometimes a little satire is in order," it sounds like an apology.
And while we're on the subject of apologies, what's with Brooks's nervous little joke in the acknowledgments that his wife Jane's "design for our new house made this book necessary"? Is he saying that he's feeling a little overextended and underinspired these days? If so, give him points for honesty. In my characteristically American way, I see a worthwhile book coming out of David Brooks sometime in the future. But On Paradise Drive is a disappointment.
Reviewed by Timothy Noah
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.
Product details
- Publisher : Simon & Schuster (May 25, 2004)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0743227387
- ISBN-13 : 978-0743227384
- Item Weight : 15.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.86 x 1.03 x 8.74 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,583,151 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,578 in Sociology of Class
- #3,705 in Popular Social Psychology & Interactions
- #5,467 in Popular Culture in Social Sciences
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

David Brooks is an op-ed columnist for The New York Times and appears regularly on “PBS NewsHour,” NPR’s “All Things Considered” and NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He teaches at Yale University and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is the bestselling author of The Social Animal: The Hidden Sources of Love, Character, and Achievement; Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There; and On Paradise Drive: How We Live Now (And Always Have) in the Future Tense. He has three children and lives in Maryland.
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Customers find the book wonderfully readable and humorous, with one review noting it will have you chuckling. Moreover, the writing style and content receive positive feedback. Additionally, they appreciate the analysis, with one describing it as a well-written social studies book, and find it thought-provoking, with one review highlighting its familiar insights into the American psyche. Customers also consider it worth the price, with one mentioning it's worth a few minutes a day.
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Customers find the book wonderfully readable, with one mentioning it's a joy to read.
"...Insightful, analytical and so darned talented. Another great read." Read more
"...For me, it's no overstatement to say that BoBos was a joy to read...." Read more
"...At any rate, despite these quibbles, this is a most readable and fun sociology text, one that would spark the interest of any reader who cares even..." Read more
"...David Brooks is well worth listening to, his common sense opinions give one "food for thought". This is a book that I will re-read." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's analysis, with one describing it as a well-written social studies book.
"I have enjoyed Davis Brooks' commentary and books. Insightful, analytical and so darned talented. Another great read." Read more
"...This is again a well written social studies book that I could not put down and passed it on to others...." Read more
"...give 3.5 stars to this book because while it was well-written and well-researched, I had to struggle through it while I laughed my way through "..." Read more
"David Brooks is a great statirist and this book extends his thoughts into 2007...." Read more
Customers find the book humorous, describing it as an entertaining tome that will have them chuckling.
"...I wholeheartily recommend this book. For thought-proving insight and good humor, the views of David Brooks on any subject and in in any media --..." Read more
"...At any rate, despite these quibbles, this is a most readable and fun sociology text, one that would spark the interest of any reader who cares even..." Read more
"Comedy works when it says something true and Brooks' comic piece of pop cultural criticism is indeed true as he glibly fillets the various suburban..." Read more
"David Brooks not only has an entertaining (bordering on flippant) style of writing, and his insights into the American psyche are very familiar...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, with one mentioning its insights into the American psyche, while another appreciates the author's commentary and writing style.
"I have enjoyed Davis Brooks' commentary and books. Insightful, analytical and so darned talented. Another great read." Read more
"...style of writing, and his insights into the American psyche are very familiar. We can all recognize his characterizations...." Read more
"David Brooks is a VERY interesting individual. I have watched him on PBS, in person when he speaks in Santa Barbara, and then read this book...." Read more
"Love David Brooks. So few people have a rational head on their shoulders, his work is a joy to read." Read more
Customers find the book worth the price, with some noting it's worth a few minutes a day to read.
"...temporary furlough from Amnesty International" is alone worth the price of this funny book...." Read more
"...Brooks is a serious mind, and his "pop sociology" is always worth a look...." Read more
"...inquiry into the American psyche and like all his books is well worth the time and effort..." Read more
"Worth a few minutes a day..." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, with one noting that the pages were clean and unmarked.
"...Condition received: Pages were clean and unmarked. However, dust cover and edges of book were pretty “beat up.”..." Read more
"David Brooks not only has an entertaining (bordering on flippant) style of writing, and his insights into the American psyche are very familiar...." Read more
"...I'm a big fan of David Brooks' irreverent, hyperbolic writing style, but I do think he's stretched himself too far and too thin in this book." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2025I have enjoyed Davis Brooks' commentary and books. Insightful, analytical and so darned talented. Another great read.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2007After writing "BoBos in Paradise," David Brooks certainly had a tough act to follow. I found that BoBos captured the psyche of the affluent baby boomers in a way that was both enlightening and rip roaringly humorous. For me, it's no overstatement to say that BoBos was a joy to read. I haven't enjoyed reading a writer as much since I faithfully read the columns of the late and legenday Mike Royko of the Chicago Tribune.
With "On Paradise Drive," Brooks does it again. This time he takes a broader look at segments of the American population and explains what motivates them to work so hard and be so optimistic. In the book, Brooks brings to life the diverse ways in which we Americans dream about our futures and live out our lives to accomplish our dreams. As it turns out we are united in our future orientation, self-determinism and optimism yet diverse in the paths we choose to pursue. It is delightful to see so many segments of the American population pursuing happiness and at least partially finding it in the pursuit. Aristotle and Thomas Jefferson would be delighted to read this book since they both understood how important it was for humans to seek happiness even with the some of the inevitable bad decisions we make and consequences we experience along the way.
The one area I would have liked Brooks to explore is the actual failure of western societies to improve subjective well-being (i.e the sociologists' term for happiness) since WWII. For those who are interested, two good books to read on this are David Myers' "The American Paradox" and Robert Lanes' "The Loss of Happiness in Market Democracies." Happiness has not increased since WWII and following September 11 people's values are changing. It would be fascinating to hear David Brooks thoughts on this development.
As a side note, Brooks the thinker/writer/commentator is certainly doing great work. As a person, I find his humility, realist's idealism, and sense of humor admirable. Two pieces I read that really give us a sense of David Brooks the person were his tribute in Readers Digest to the late Michael Kelly of The Atlantic (who died in an accident while on assignment in Iraq) and Brook's Times' column on his son's bar mitzvah. In them we sense Mr. Brooks love of liberty, doing good, family, and the friends such as Mr. Kelly that he admires for their strength of character.
I wholeheartily recommend this book. For thought-proving insight and good humor, the views of David Brooks on any subject and in in any media -- books, his tues/sat New York Times columns, or friday evening appearances on PBS's The New Hour)-- are always worth considering.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2004This entertaining tome will have you chuckling as you gain new insights into what makes America--and Americans--tick. Brooks has pulled together a wonderfully readable, vastly amusing if somewhat uneven book that purports to look at "real" America. Although by the author's own admission, his slice of real America is pretty narrow. Brooks takes a look at several different slices of white bread, from urban hipsters to the farthest-flung exurbanites, and attempts to come up with a Grand Unified Theory of what drives us to be the way we are.
While this book is a great read, I found its unevenness somewhat unsettling, as Brooks veers from hilariously specific takes on various urban and suburban types to a kind of sentimental psuedo-spirituality in some of the later chapters. I think his Grand Unified Theory is at least partly right, but the tone of the book changes dramatically from chapter to chapter. At any rate, despite these quibbles, this is a most readable and fun sociology text, one that would spark the interest of any reader who cares even a little bit about the state of our current culture.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2006Comedy works when it says something true and Brooks' comic piece of pop cultural criticism is indeed true as he glibly fillets the various suburban types, including "crunchies," self-righteous, do-gooder Trader Joe shoppers who tend to their "anti-lawns"; downtown urban hipsters, upper class Audi-driving professionals with manicured lawns. Brooks' 3-page description of "morally elevated supermarkets" in which he describes the manner in which it seems "that every cashier is on temporary furlough from Amnesty International" is alone worth the price of this funny book. Fans of this type of biting "sociology" will also want to check out Paul Fussell's Class: A Guide Through the American Status System.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 2014David Brooks is a serious mind, and his "pop sociology" is always worth a look. Here's a very different view of America from the one you probably hold implicitly in your mind - well explained.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2012David Brooks as in "Bobos in Paradise" is always very entertaining. This is again a well written social studies book that I could not put down and passed it on to others. David Brooks is well worth listening to, his common sense opinions give one "food for thought".
This is a book that I will re-read.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2023Sold by: ThriftBooks-Atlanta
Condition advertised: Used - Like New - Former library book; Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less
Condition received: Pages were clean and unmarked. However, dust cover and edges of book were pretty “beat up.” I would not categorize this book as “Like New.”
1.0 out of 5 starsSold by: ThriftBooks-AtlantaBook was not as advertised.
Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2023
Condition advertised: Used - Like New - Former library book; Pages are clean and are not marred by notes or folds of any kind. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less
Condition received: Pages were clean and unmarked. However, dust cover and edges of book were pretty “beat up.” I would not categorize this book as “Like New.”
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2016David Brooks has a keen eye for what motivates this social experiment we call America. He begins Paradise Drive with what seems like a very superficial look at American culture through the lens of residential patterns and how they are differentiated from each other. But this is a segue to a far deeper inquiry into the American psyche and like all his books is well worth the time and effort...