Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
We Do Our Part - Charles Peters
eTextbook alternate format product

Instant online reading.
Don't wait for delivery!

Go digital and save!

We Do Our Part

By: Charles Peters

Paperback | 29 October 2019

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $29.99

$28.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $7.19 with

Ships in 15 to 25 business days

Charles Peters tellsthe story of "how Democrats lost their way-and how they can find it again" (The Washington Post) in a book "full of vivid, funny, often touching anecdotes" (The Atlantic).

"We Do Our Part" was the slogan of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's National Recovery Administration-and it captured the can-do spirit that allowed America to survive the Great Depression and win World War II. Over the course of a sixty-year career as a Washington, D.C., journalist and historian, Peters, the founder of the Washington Monthly, has witnessed drastic changes firsthand. Ranging from the history of lobbying to the explosion of high-end fashion and travel reporting, this surprising book explains how we can consolidate the gains we have made while recapturing the generous spirit we have lost.

We Do Our Part is entertaining, insightful, and engaging. Spanning decades of politics and culture, Peters compares the flood of talented, original thinkers who flowed into the nation's capital to join FDR's administration with the tide of self-serving government staffers who left to exploit their opportunities on Wall Street and as lobbyists from the 1970s to today.He explains that too many Democrats lost touch with the average American as the liberal elite became more concerned with being smarter, having better taste, and makingmore money than with understanding why the average worker was making less and resented being looked down on. He cites as an example Hillary Clinton's failure to understand what was wrong with taking a six-figure speaking fee from Goldman Sachs or with calling people "a basket of deplorables."

If liberal Democrats-and Peters is one-want to win again, they need to be fair to everyone, including the working man who was once essential to the party of FDR. We Do Our Partshows us where we have been and where we are going, drawn from the invaluable perspective of a man who has seen America's better days and still believes in the promise that lies ahead.

Praise for We Do Our Part

" Peters weaves a synthesis of mainstream and progressive, centrist and popular thought that would re-anchor the Democratic Party, both in its own traditions and in outreach to the restless, angry swath of the country that elected President Trump. . . . Peters is an American original."-The Washington Post

"A great book about modern American history."-Chris Matthews, Hardball

"Part joyful memoir, part shrewd political analysis, and part insightful cultural criticism . . . Peters offers a keen understanding of where the Democrats went wrong in scorning the kind of people in Appalachia that he grew up with"-Walter Shapiro, Roll Call

"We Do Our Part is not directly about the Trump era or phenomenon, though Charlie gets to Trump at the end. But it is all about the resentful, unequal, uncaring parts of today's American culture that Trump has inflamed and that have made Trump possible-and how to cope with them."-James Fallows, The Atlantic

"An important book . . . The truth Charles Peters aims to impart in this book is one that all Americans, and especially liberals, need to understand- An America in which the elite serves the interests of the majority isn't a pipe dream."-Washington Monthly

"A wise and brilliant book by a wise and brilliant man . . . Everyone should read it."-Nicholas Thompson, editor, newyorker.com
Industry Reviews
"Part joyful memoir, part shrewd political analysis, and part insightful cultural criticism . . . [Peters] offers a keen understanding of where the Democrats went wrong in scorning the kind of people in Appalachia that he grew up with"-Walter Shapiro, Roll Call

"We Do Our Part is not directly about the Trump era or phenomenon, though Charlie gets to Trump at the end. But it is all about the resentful, unequal, uncaring parts of today's American culture that Trump has inflamed and that have made Trump possible-and how to cope with them. . . . Vivid, funny, often touching."-James Fallows, The Atlantic

"An important book on the central issue facing our country . . . The truth [Charles] Peters aims to impart in this book is one that all Americans, and especially liberals, need to understand: An America in which the elite serves the interests of the majority isn't a pipe dream. That world actually existed, in living memory. And there are signs, in the country's reaction to the election of Donald Trump, that it could exist again."-Washington Monthly

"The spirit of all Americans doing their part for the good of society-not just greedily grabbing for themselves-is woven throughout the book. . . . The old magazine editor has immense knowledge about Washington and its colorful government insiders. His book is filled with Capitol Hill struggles."-Charleston Gazette-Mail

"A thoughtful, well-reasoned argument for American citizens to pull back from political brinksmanship and embrace the values of the Roosevelt era. . . It's always worth listening to a guy who managed John F. Kennedy's 1960 campaign in West Virginia and was introduced to marijuana by Allen Ginsberg; this man has stories. . . . A cogent and meaningful call for citizens to share the benefits and burdens of a unified society-hopefully an argument that isn't already past its sell-by date."-Kirkus Reviews

"A wise and brilliant book by a wise and brilliant man . . . Charlie Peters loves this country deeply, and this book is packed with insights on how we can make America more just, more civil, and, well, great. Everyone should read it."-Nicholas Thompson, editor, The New Yorker

"Charles Peters, who remembers the New Deal as an indelible personal experience, has given us a deeply moving, and also deeply troubling, account of how we got from the national political culture he knew when he was young to the one we have today. This is a book about the past that makes it possible for us to imagine a better future: one in which public service regains its rightful place of highest purpose in American society."-Nicholas Lemann, dean emeritus, Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism

More in History

Looking from the North : Australian history from the top down - Henry Reynolds
Papyrus : THE MILLION-COPY GLOBAL BESTSELLER - Irene Vallejo

RRP $26.99

$21.75

19%
OFF
Guts and Glory : Diggers, Sport and War - Peter Rees

RRP $36.99

$28.75

22%
OFF
The Eagle and the Hart : The Tragedy of Richard II and Henry IV - Helen Castor
The Burning Earth : An Environmental History of the Last 500 Years - Sunil Amrith
Forgotten Peoples of the Ancient World - Philip Matyszak
The Mysterious Case of the Victorian Female Detective - Sara Lodge
Where It All Went Wrong : The case against John Howard - Amy Remeikis
Half of a Yellow Sun - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

RRP $22.99

$20.75

10%
OFF
A Voyage Around the Queen - Craig Brown

RRP $26.99

$22.99

15%
OFF
Abandoned Women : Scottish Convicts Exiled Beyond the Seas - Lucy Frost
The Rape of Nanking : The Forgotten Holocaust of World War II - Iris Chang
Rhineland : Hitler's Last Defence, 1944-45 - Anthony Tucker-Jones

RRP $49.99

$38.75

22%
OFF