An intimate look at American lives in fraught times.
Washington Post editor and writer Finkel picks up from his last book, Thank You for Your Service, to offer an immersive portrayal of contemporary America, from Election Day 2016 through Election Day 2020, through the eyes of Iraqi war veteran Brent Cummings, his family, and his neighbors in a town in Georgia. Cummings, born in Mississippi, is aware that as “a white male pickup-driving ex-soldier living in a Georgia county where in 2016 Donald Trump received 71 percent of the vote,” he might be assumed to share his community’s political views. His neighbor, for example, professes “no doubt that pedophilia existed in Hollywood and that Satanists existed within the Democratic party. He also had no doubt a deep state existed that was intent on overthrowing Trump.” But Cummings and his wife are offended by Trump’s lies and vulgarity and by the racism and xenophobia that his rhetoric has incited. “The country he had spent most of his life defending,” Cummings thought, “was being overtaken by something he didn’t fully understand.” Finkel portrays Cummings as “a man in the middle, a man who throughout his life had been searching for some sense of larger purpose and meaning.” The military fulfilled that sense of purpose, but he returned beset by terrifying nightmares and gnawing questions. His wife, too, is unsettled both by the divisiveness she observes and by family pressures: Their college-age daughter shows signs of anxiety; a younger daughter, with Down syndrome, has suddenly exhibited selective mutism; and her dying mother needs her care. Comparing the U.S. with his wartime experiences in the Middle East, Cummings concludes that Americans were not “a rageful people. Some were, but most wanted no part of it.” Still, he wonders, “What were their sacrifices for?”
A sharply observed depiction of a divided country.