"A richly researched, insightful, and evenhanded account of Newt Gingrich's long drive to win and then maintain a majority for House Republicans."--Journal of Southern History
"This book uses data and stories to construct an argument that is accessible to people not only in the academy but also to all those who enjoy a good political book. It is the best of what journalists, historians, and political scientists do in mixing archival research, interviews, and data analysis."--Perspectives on Politics
"Readers will find both a detailed summary of Gingrich's House Career and a new lens to view the work of the United States Congress."--Congress & the Presidency
"This excellent book unpacks Newt Gingrich as a politician and strategist and is an important contribution to the literature on congressional leadership. Highly recommended."--Choice
"Green and Crouch use the analytical tools of political science to understand one of the most controversial--and increasingly representative--party entrepreneurs of modern times, Newt Gingrich. A thoughtful account of the former Speaker of the House."--Julian E. Zelizer, professor of political history, Princeton University, and author of Burning Down the House: Newt Gingrich, the Fall of a Speaker, and the Rise of the New Republican Party
"Green and Crouch have produced a superb account of Newt Gingrich's political career. With deep research, crisp writing, and fair-minded analysis, this book is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand American political parties and congressional leadership."--John J. Pitney Jr., author of After Reagan: Bush, Dukakis, and the 1988 Election
"Matthew N. Green and Jeffrey Crouch's thoroughly researched, regularly insightful, and highly informative book will likely become, as it should, the definitive assessment of Newt Gingrich's time in Congress. His role in seizing and using then-emerging trends in partisanship and polarization continues in Congress today and shapes American politics more broadly. Green and Crouch's careful extension of the legislative entrepreneurship model to the partisan arena is well-considered and highly explanatory in contextualizing and explaining the former Speaker's career in the House."--Douglas Koopman, professor of politics, Calvin University