After a year of quarantine and masks and years of severe political division, journalist Keohane shows us why it’s vital for us to come together.
"You cannot hope to be a good citizen,” writes the author in his first book, “you cannot hope to be a moral person, if you do not first make an effort to see that the world is a very different place for the person sitting next to you. That their strangers are not necessarily your strangers. And the way to understand this, across social boundaries, or racial boundaries, or ideological boundaries, or any other boundary that has been thrown up to keep us apart, is to talk to them.” Keohane seeks to teach readers how to have those conversations. Joining him on his adventures—e.g., cross-country train trips, seminars abroad—after a year in lockdown is a strange experience at first, but by the end, it makes the prospect of reentry even more exciting. Reading this book is like taking a college course that becomes a cult favorite because the witty, enthusiastic professor makes the topic seem not only entertaining, but essential. Keohane has some of the mannerisms of that popular professor—e.g., describing the process as “our journey”—and liberally dousing the data with asides and wisecracks. When he quotes Jane Goodall on grim similarities between marauding chimps and humans, a footnote reads, "Say what you will about us, but, in our defense, we do generally manage to refrain from eating one another's newborns." In an earthy retelling of the Old Testament, Keohane characterizes Jesus' origins in "motley, rowdy" Galilee with its "mix of Jews, Samaritans, Greeks and Syrians, living shoulder to shoulder": "Sort of like the Messiah coming from New Jersey." And why the Old Testament? Apparently, it has plenty to say about strangers, as do the members of a huge cast of memorable characters ranging from experts to homeless people all over the U.S. and Europe.
Possibly life-changing ideas supported with extensive sociological research, lively storytelling, and contagious jollity.