In The Nineties, Klosterman examines the social, political and cultural history of the era with his signature wit. It s a fascinating trip down memory lane. Time
An engaging, nuanced and literate take on the alternately dynamic and diffident decade. Washington Post
Serving up the moments and meanings of a modern decade in a few hundred pages is no easy task, but Chuck Klosterman has managed to boil a hearty stew of insight. . . . [Klosterman is] a master of smooth setups and downbeat finishes. USA Today
[Klosterman is] Generation X s definitive chronicler of culture. GQ
From one of our great chroniclers of pop culture comes this entertaining romp through the twilight years of the twentieth century. . . . Roving across flashpoints in movies, music, and politics, Klosterman captures a world where apathy was the defining tone, art was experiencing a seismic shift, and celebrity culture was on the eve of a digital explosion. Esquire
Simultaneously a deep and light sprint through the decade that doesn t just namecheck people and bands and movies, but burrows under as to why they were important then. And what that means today. . . . Klosterman zips in and around the entirety of the decade, and even readers who were up on pop culture at the time will be reminded of things they haven t thought about in two or more decades. . . . If you came of age in the 90s, you will love The Nineties. If not, it s a singularly wonderful analytical and historical book of a time not so long ago. Houston Press
Leave it to Chuck Klosterman to examine the decade in a fresh, unpredictable way that avoids nostalgia and easy generalizations. . . . Klosterman s text is never anything less than wise, challenging and winningly idiosyncratic. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
An informative, endlessly entertaining look back at the 1990s. . . . What [Klosterman] always succeeds at is conveying an anecdote, oddity, or thought exercise about the decade that you immediately want to share with a friend. BuzzFeed
Always an astute cultural observer and a fan of deep dives into any subject, Klosterman is focused here on a decade in American life that he says is often portrayed as a low-risk grunge cartoon . . . Klosterman s gift is seizing on those moments that any Gen Xer can readily recall and pulling the strings a bit to put it in some kind of historical perspective. Associated Press
Klosterman s remarkable book made me rethink my decade and rethink myself. Airmail
The nineties continue to fascinate, especially with a wonderful guide like Chuck Klosterman. Toronto Star
A book that you ll read in about two days, but then want to re-read to make sure you didn t miss anything. Fatherly
[The Nineties] attempts a comprehensive analysis of the texture of the 1990s the feeling of the era. Perhaps no cultural critic is better suited for this task than Klosterman. . . . By immersing himself in the objectivity furnished by the past, Klosterman opens a critical space wherein we can consider the present. SPIN
Klosterman zooms in on the interplay between the titular decade s opposing generations Generation X and Baby Boomers and puts the era s technological transformations in their rightful historical contexts. . . . His greatest service here is his resistance to assign sharp edges where there is only an underwhelming, fuzzy consensus. Vulture, 49 Books We Can t Wait to Read in 2022
Klosterman is far too ambitious to merely let readers wallow in nostalgia and instead looks at the 90s by applying the accessible style of cultural criticism that has been his brand during a career that has now spanned 12 books. The Nineties examines everything from pop culture (Ross and Rachel) to politics (Ross Perot and Ralph Nader), as well as the Information Age s age of innocence when the internet was looming out there somewhere, waiting to happen and transform society. San Francisco Chronicle
[T]he 1990s is about the arrival of new media technologies that would upend our lives in endless ways large and small. . . . Klosterman s take on all of this often is insightful, prompting the reader to think about what the internet and social media have done to our brains, to our sense of selves, to our physical environments. . . . [A]n entertaining tour. Klosterman skillfully analyzes Gen-X touchstones like Quentin Tarantino and Seinfeld, Nirvana and Garth Brooks. The Oregonian
Wonderfully researched, compellingly written, and often very funny, this is a superb reassessment of an underappreciated decade from a stupendously gifted essayist. Booklist (starred review)
An entertaining journey through the last decade of the 20th century. . . . [Klosterman] brings the decade to vivid new life. . . . As in his previous books of cultural criticism, Klosterman delivers a multifaceted portrait that s both fun and insightful. A fascinating examination of a period still remembered by most, refreshingly free of unnecessary mythmaking. Kirkus (starred review)
There s not much missing from this delightful collection of quotes and culture from the era that most find difficult to define. . . . With humor and history (supported by articles, TV news segments, advertisements, and interviews), Klosterman s volume is the perfect guide for millennials who wear vintage t-shirts ironically. From politics to Prozac, a fascinating exploration of Generation X from the perspective of those who lived it and witnessed it. Readers will be raiding closets for mom jeans and drawers for scrunchies after reading this nostalgia-inducing book. Library Journal (starred review)
The Nineties Is a fun and funny romp through a decade just now distant enough to be viewed in historical relief. Chuck Klosterman is old enough to have grown up in the old order of culture and politics that began to tremble, and eventually collapse, during the 1990s; he s young enough to be immersed fully in the new societal currents that began in those years and define us now. For all the delight Klosterman takes in his narrative excursions, his sketches of the Bill Clinton years evoke melancholy. For a moment, it seemed plausible that a young new president could play usher to a post-Cold War era of humane and rational politics. For now, at least, we must recall the 1990s as the soil in which our contemporary politics of contempt, paranoia, alienation, and violence blossomed. John Harris, founding editor, Politico
The Nineties is a fascinating, wholly original exploration of a bewilderingly bygone time, written by one of our wisest, wryest cultural critics. Who else could pull Quentin Tarantino, college football, and Alan Greenspan not to mention Tiger Woods, Dick Morris, and Reality Bites into a coherent examination of a world about to undergo a paradigm shift? Louisa Thomas, staff writer, The New Yorker
This might be the book Chuck Klosterman was born to write: a witty and unpredictable history of the decade that just won't go away. From OJ to AOL to the GOP, he has a theory about everything, and a story about how all of it fits together. Kelefa Sanneh, author of Major Labels
Chuck Klosterman has done something remarkable and, to be honest, frightening. He's hacked his way through the great clutter of our information age, where we know everything but understand nothing, to arrive at a magical oasis of reckoning and recognition, to discover a fact that's been hiding in plain sight, the only fact that matters anymore, really, namely this: the 1990s were the last decade of the United States of America, as a functioning cohesive society and as an idea. Buy this book right now, not because of the smart history it unspools, although that's a delight, but because of the window it gives you into the future. Wright Thompson, author of Pappyland
Chuck Klosterman is the bestselling author of nine nonfiction books (including The Nineties; Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs; and But What If We re Wrong?; and Killing Yourself to Live), two novels (Downtown Owl and The Visible Man), and the short story collection Raised in Captivity. He has written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, GQ, Esquire, Spin, The Guardian (London), The Believer, and ESPN. Klosterman served as the Ethicist for The New York Times Magazine for three years, and was an original founder of the website Grantland with Bill Simmons. He was raised in North Dakota and now lives in Portland, Oregon.
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