Home    >    Golden Years: How Americans Invented and Reinvented Old Age

Golden Years: How Americans Invented and Reinvented Old Age

Chappel delves into statistics and academic conferences more than he does the psychology of old age, which he can’t quite bring to life. He’s what you’d call a big-picture guy, writing about a subject whose pathos is all in the close-ups. Even so, there’s a profound loneliness skulking around his book.
Read Full Review >>
A lucid, comprehensive examination of a complex issue, and readers can be excused if, by the time they’ve turned the last of the book’s fact-and-analysis-crammed pages, they feel as if they’ve aged a few years ... The reader finishes Golden Years with a fuller understanding of all the nettlesome issues involved in the aging of America—and a fresh awareness of one’s own mortality.
Read Full Review >>
This is sober history, in the sense that it is no fun at all to read. Golden Years is related in baked-potato, hold-the-butter-and-salt prose. While reading it I felt my life slipping away more rapidly than usual ... Chappel makes me want to revisit The Golden Girls. But I wish his book had taken us closer to the present day
Read Full Review >>

Related Books