
In "Wildland," Evan Osnos journeys through three American cities to decode how we transformed from post-9/11 unity to Capitol insurrection. A sobering examination of wealth, poverty, and division that critics call "wildly partisan" yet essential for understanding America's deepening fury.
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In the summer of 2018, California rancher Glenn Kile struck a metal stake into a wasp nest, inadvertently creating a spark that ignited the bone-dry grass around him. Despite his desperate attempts to extinguish the flames, the resulting Mendocino Complex Fire consumed an area twice the size of New York City. Though Kile struck the match, deeper forces had primed the land to burn after decades of warming and drought. This wildfire serves as both literal event and powerful metaphor for America's political landscape - a parable for a time when land and people seemed to mirror each other's rage. The genius of "Wildland" lies in its intimate portraits of everyday Americans across the socioeconomic spectrum, revealing how the same forces that set California ablaze had been gathering in our politics, economy, and culture for decades. Imagine returning to your homeland after years abroad to find it fundamentally altered. This was Osnos's experience in 2013 after working as a foreign correspondent. Washington DC revealed stark contrasts - from comfortable neighborhoods with clean water and air to profound inequality, with white families being eighty-one times richer than Black families. Most disturbing was Americans' adaptation to regular mass shootings - children practicing survival drills while political action failed to materialize after tragedies like Sandy Hook. To understand this transformation, Osnos triangulated American experience through three places he'd previously lived: coal country in Clarksburg, West Virginia; the segregated landscape of Chicago; and Greenwich, Connecticut - America's hedge fund capital. These locations revealed how wealth inequality, segregation, and unchecked economic liberty had transformed American lives and beliefs.
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco
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Creato da alumni della Columbia University a San Francisco

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