
The United States is an adolescent nation. I remember feeling offended when I first read this, probably back in the 1960s in one of my parents’ news magazines, LIFE or Time or Newsweek.
But of course we’re adolescent.
Politics, culture, spirituality, and opinion from the author of THE BOOK OF CALAMITIES

"In his enthralling book, Trachtenberg's five questions on suffering move from 'Why me?' to 'What do I owe those who suffer?' . . . Beautifully written, intricately woven . . . . 'The Book of Calamities' is a subtle mixture of reporting, history and philosophy that addresses some of life's most difficult questions." -- Newark Star-Ledger
"This book is 'a layman's response' to unimaginable anguish, a collection of powerful stories rather than a philosophical treatise. Writing movingly about victims and survivors of natural disasters, war, genocide, domestic violence, addiction, illness, suicide and injustice, he deftly intermingles their stories with observations from religion, philosophy and literature. . . . Trachtenberg offers no easy solutions. His book, however, like Andrew Solomon's 'The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression,' succeeds because it asks the right questions, calls on the experience of articulate witnesses, and—through skillful narrative and trenchant observation—beguiles the reader into facing heartbreaking reality." -- Publishers Weekly [starred review]