After initially enjoying the sweeping history of our country from the founding to present, I was shockingly appealed by the author's deep-seated hatred and disgust with conservatives/"individualists" which showed up in Chapters 7 and 8.
Initially this was a good read, about the 11 "American Nations" that exist within the United States, such as Yankeedom, Tidewater, The Midlands, El Norte, the Far West (see map pages 61-62). Provided a summary of his earlier book on this idea. Woodard made a compelling case about how difficult it is for political leaders to balance all the varied interests in these "nations" and in the end try to find the "sweet spot" between Individual Liberty and the Common Good (premise of the book). Book was especially good in parts; where I highlighted key passages. I would consider myself from The Far West with a bit of The Midlands experience.
Then I got to Chapters 7 and 8 ("Dixie Takes Over" and "Rise of the Radicals")---what happened??? Woodard's disgust and venom for conservatives/"individualists" strikes the reader. A layperson reading along would think that Newt Gingrich, Ronald Reagan, etc were some of the biggest and nastiest criminals to walk the earth. Christian leaders were mocked within the pages along with other movement leaders. The most jaw-dropping opinion from the author was on page 221 where he compared our country under the Bush Administration in 2008 to the "dark days of 1932". Wait, What?
The most glaring omission in the book is about abortion. Maybe the author didn't want to talk about it, but if you are writing a book on "American Character" and the title of the book is "American Character", shouldn't the legalization of abortion be discussed and how that affected America's Character? Strange that Woodard ignored it? Why?
The other big omission of this book are the biggest policy failures by recent Democrats in the White House (Carter, Clinton and Obama). Maybe *that* damaged our character? The current president hasn't healed our racial divisions, his Stimulu$ didn't stimulate, his financial reform didn't reform, his signature achievement, the Affordable Care Act, is in a death spiral, immigration wasn't reformed, he withdrew prematurely from Iraq, underestimated Russia and Putinism, befriended Iran, and he blew the Arab Spring (to borrow from the Federalist's Robert Tracinski). Or how about by the time he leaves office, President Obama will have doubled the national Debt from $10.6 trillion to almost $20 trillion dollars? Or the approximately 9.6 million children killed by abortions during his presidency? Silence from Woodard. I could also list Carter and Clinton's many failures, along with Harry Reid, who forever changed the Senate for the worst.
"American Character" had much promise and was readable through about Chapter 6, then fell off a cliff. Again, what happened? I'm not sure. Pass on this one, America.