The tradition of foreign thinkers commenting on American democracy is long and distinguished ... To this venerable genre, Nick Bryant adds an un-Trollopian modern sensibility and a great deal of journalistic flair. A longtime BBC correspondent, the British-born Bryant has covered the United States from the United States for much of his distinguished career. In When America Stopped Being Great, he offers what the book’s subtitle calls 'a history of the present.' But it’s really an elegy for a nation that Bryant first came to know as a young man on an extended visit to Orange County, Calif., amid native-son Ronald Reagan’s 'morning in America' campaign and the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics ... If Bryant is echoing foreign laments, he nonetheless gives them a fresh arc. Drawing from his crammed reporters’ notebook and crumbling love affair with his adopted country, he tells a story familiar to anyone who’s cared too much about someone intent on self-destruction. In Bryant’s dark but deftly told tale, the United States is in the final stages of a precipitous, ongoing and likely irreversible decline.
BBC senior foreign correspondent Bryant mounts a scathing indictment of the polarization and degradation that have transformed the U.S. ... After [Bryant's] trenchant yet bleak history, however, his hope for unification seems unlikely. An adroit political critique.
BBC foreign correspondent Bryant (Confessions from Correspondentland) delivers a revealing outsider’s perspective on the roots of America’s current state of 'disunion' ... Bryant’s pithy observations [...] offer fresh insight. This well-informed portrait of American dysfunction hits home.