Part investigation, part cultural X-ray ... The book’s opening chapters are its best ... The book’s power sometimes rests too heavily on the very surfaces it describes. Richardson builds much of his narrative from publicly available material...and less from firsthand interviews with people in Mangione’s orbit ... Absent this type of personal detail, the result feels meticulously curated but emotionally distant ... What’s missing is a deeper accounting of why Luigi’s act resonates now — in an America where algorithmic denials of health care collide with the algorithmic spread of resentment and despair ... Richardson writes beautifully. His reporting on the media aftermath, the dueling op-eds, the partisan spin, the influencer reels, is precise and often bleakly funny. But for all its elegance, Luigi offers relatively little fresh fieldwork.
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