cover image An American Dreamer: Life in a Divided Country

An American Dreamer: Life in a Divided Country

David Finkel. Random House, $32 (256p) ISBN 978-0-593-59706-4

Finkel (Thank You for Your Service), a staff writer for the Washington Post, examines America’s political, social, and cultural divides in this immersive profile of Brent Cummings, an Iraq War veteran and instructor in military science at the University of North Georgia. Drawing on conversations with Cummings and his friends and family, primarily between 2016 and 2021, Finkel finds that the unifying belief among those he interviews—across the political spectrum—is the idea that the country is fracturing. This is especially true of Cummings, who wrestles with the traumatic social upheaval he witnessed in Iraq and who believes that a similarly traumatic state of social conflict is besetting the country during the presidency of Donald Trump, whom Cummings opposes while living and working in a solidly pro-Trump community. Meanwhile, Cummings and his family face down a series of personal challenges, which Finkel casts against national events. For example, a late chapter recounts Cummings’s feelings of isolation and ruminations on political violence during a 2018 stint in Israel, where he worked training Palestinian Authority security forces; Finkel’s prosodic narration has Cummings reflecting on Trump’s calls for a U.S.-Mexico border wall in the shadow of the West Bank barrier wall. It’s an evocative contribution to the shelf on what ails America in the age of Trump. (Feb.)