This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
G. K. Chesterton's What's Wrong with the World is a masterful blend of social critique, humor, and timeless insight—an exploration of the problems facing modern civilization that remains as sharp and relevant today as when it was first published in 1910. With his trademark wit and paradox, Chesterton dissects the political, social, and moral assumptions of his age—and, astonishingly, of ours.
Through essays that tackle feminism, education, capitalism, socialism, and the family, Chesterton argues that society's crises stem not from external forces, but from a loss of moral and spiritual grounding. His defense of common sense, domestic life, and the ordinary joys of human existence stands in stark contrast to the bureaucratic and ideological extremes that threaten personal freedom.
Both prophetic and playful, Chesterton exposes the contradictions of progress and the dangers of forgetting the simple truths about human nature. His observations on the family, gender, economics, and politics are delivered with such clarity and humor that they read like a modern diagnosis of an ancient illness.
Brilliantly written and endlessly quotable, What's Wrong with the World remains one of Chesterton's greatest works—an intellectual and moral challenge to every generation that asks not only what's wrong with the world, but what's right with it, and how we might reclaim it.