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A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear: The Utopian Plot to Liberate an American Town (And Some Bears) Kindle Edition
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Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling
(Author)
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Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherPublicAffairs
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Publication dateSeptember 15, 2020
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File size5643 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"[A] witty and precisely observed debut....Hongoltz-Hetling skillfully probes shortcomings and ironies in the libertarian philosophy....The result is an entertaining and incisive portrait of political ideology run amok."
―Publishers Weekly
"An entertaining sendup of idealistic politics and the fatal flaws of overweening self-interest."
―Kirkus
"[Hongoltz-Hetling] reconstructs a remarkable, and remarkably strange, episode in recent history....The resulting narrative is simultaneously hilarious, poignant, and deeply unsettling."
―The New Republic
"Every once in a while, a book comes along that is so darkly comedic, with such a defined sense of place and filled with characters that range from the fascinating to the bizarre to the earnest, that partway through reading, it hits you: This has got to become a Coen brothers movie...Hongoltz-Hetling is a master of the turn of phrase. His voice is breezy and critical, with a finely tuned eye aimed at the absurdities as well as at the earnestness of the Free Town Project."
―Star Tribune
"Since the beginning, Americans have been fighting about the balance between individual liberty and the common good. Hongoltz-Hetling shows what can happen when one rural New Hampshire town went to the libertarian extreme in this madcap tale that zig-zags between tragedy and farce, with the possibility of being eaten."―Colin Woodard, New York Times-bestselling author of American Nations and Union
"A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear is a finely drawn portrait of one freedom-loving town, and a joyful romp through the dark corners of the American psyche. Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling is a gifted writer with a high-powered radar for the strange details of American life. He skillfully portrays the dreamers and eccentrics who populate Grafton, and the bears lurking just beyond its treelines. At turns hilarious and alarming, this story had me firmly in its jaws from the opening pages."―Evan Ratliff, author of The Mastermind
"Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling's wild and wonderful blend of small-town America and large-scale ideals, imparted with humor and insight reminiscent of Sarah Vowell and Bill Bryson, is an unpredictable and endlessly fascinating feat of immersive reporting, filled with singular characters and doughnut-eating bears."―Michael Finkel, bestselling author of The Stranger in the Woods --This text refers to the paperback edition.
―Publishers Weekly
"An entertaining sendup of idealistic politics and the fatal flaws of overweening self-interest."
―Kirkus
"[Hongoltz-Hetling] reconstructs a remarkable, and remarkably strange, episode in recent history....The resulting narrative is simultaneously hilarious, poignant, and deeply unsettling."
―The New Republic
"Every once in a while, a book comes along that is so darkly comedic, with such a defined sense of place and filled with characters that range from the fascinating to the bizarre to the earnest, that partway through reading, it hits you: This has got to become a Coen brothers movie...Hongoltz-Hetling is a master of the turn of phrase. His voice is breezy and critical, with a finely tuned eye aimed at the absurdities as well as at the earnestness of the Free Town Project."
―Star Tribune
"Since the beginning, Americans have been fighting about the balance between individual liberty and the common good. Hongoltz-Hetling shows what can happen when one rural New Hampshire town went to the libertarian extreme in this madcap tale that zig-zags between tragedy and farce, with the possibility of being eaten."―Colin Woodard, New York Times-bestselling author of American Nations and Union
"A Libertarian Walks Into a Bear is a finely drawn portrait of one freedom-loving town, and a joyful romp through the dark corners of the American psyche. Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling is a gifted writer with a high-powered radar for the strange details of American life. He skillfully portrays the dreamers and eccentrics who populate Grafton, and the bears lurking just beyond its treelines. At turns hilarious and alarming, this story had me firmly in its jaws from the opening pages."―Evan Ratliff, author of The Mastermind
"Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling's wild and wonderful blend of small-town America and large-scale ideals, imparted with humor and insight reminiscent of Sarah Vowell and Bill Bryson, is an unpredictable and endlessly fascinating feat of immersive reporting, filled with singular characters and doughnut-eating bears."―Michael Finkel, bestselling author of The Stranger in the Woods --This text refers to the paperback edition.
About the Author
Matthew Hongoltz-Hetling is a freelance journalist specializing in narrative features and investigative reporting. He has been named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, won a George Polk Award, and been voted Journalist of the Year by the Maine Press association, among numerous other honors. His work has appeared in Foreign Policy, USA Today, Popular Science, Atavist Magazine, Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, the Associated Press, and elsewhere. He lives in Vermont.
--This text refers to the paperback edition.
Product details
- ASIN : B083J1FXY8
- Publisher : PublicAffairs (September 15, 2020)
- Publication date : September 15, 2020
- Language : English
- File size : 5643 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 305 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 1541788494
- Lending : Not Enabled
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#46,487 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #5 in State & Local Government
- #6 in History of New England U.S.
- #13 in Local U.S. Politics
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
512 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2020
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I have long felt that libertarianism was one of those ideas that was "simple, obvious, and wrong." This book should be Exhibit A in support of that proposition. In 2004, a group of libertarians moved to Grafton, New Hampshire, a town of barely 1500 people, with the avowed intention of taking over local government and making it a libertarian showcase. They succeeded, and it is a showcase of the failure of libertarianism.
To be fair, Grafton was somewhat quirky before the libertarians arrived. For example, it's fire department wasn't created until after WWII, decades after other communities had fire departments. But still, the pioneering libertarians took this quirkiness and dialed it to 11. This book is the entertaining but sad story of that transformation.
Let's talk about bears. New Hampshire, or so I learned, had always had a bear problem. Given the collapse of New England agriculture (94% of Grafton's farmland had been allowed to go wild) bear population was on the rise. But the libertarian culture made things worse, whether it was from people living in RVs with non-bearproof garbage cans to people actually feeding bears. (One of the characters in the book, the "doughnut lady" was feeding bears in her back yard, including doughnuts as treats.)
This lack of control has not gotten anybody killed yet. Not for lack of trying on the bear's part, mind you. They are no longer scared of humans and so there have been several bear attacks. Just due to sheer luck, no human has died from an attack, although several have been seriously mauled.
The subject of this book, a self-induced collapse of a town, is not a light subject and so it's not entirely a light read. It is an interesting read, and well-constructed.
To be fair, Grafton was somewhat quirky before the libertarians arrived. For example, it's fire department wasn't created until after WWII, decades after other communities had fire departments. But still, the pioneering libertarians took this quirkiness and dialed it to 11. This book is the entertaining but sad story of that transformation.
Let's talk about bears. New Hampshire, or so I learned, had always had a bear problem. Given the collapse of New England agriculture (94% of Grafton's farmland had been allowed to go wild) bear population was on the rise. But the libertarian culture made things worse, whether it was from people living in RVs with non-bearproof garbage cans to people actually feeding bears. (One of the characters in the book, the "doughnut lady" was feeding bears in her back yard, including doughnuts as treats.)
This lack of control has not gotten anybody killed yet. Not for lack of trying on the bear's part, mind you. They are no longer scared of humans and so there have been several bear attacks. Just due to sheer luck, no human has died from an attack, although several have been seriously mauled.
The subject of this book, a self-induced collapse of a town, is not a light subject and so it's not entirely a light read. It is an interesting read, and well-constructed.
45 people found this helpful
Helpful
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2020
Verified Purchase
For 12 years I met w/7-10 Libertarians twice a month or more. I enjoyed my banter with them until I became bored w/the same-old same-old rhetoric. I asked them over and over, OK -- show me where this Randian Libertarian philosophy has ever played out and worked? I knew it was a fail on a few acres in Chile, an island in the Pacific and somewhere on the east coast of England. I knew about the Free Town project in Grafton however what I did not know is that it was a HUGE fail and that was apparent at the beginning of the project. This book was fun to read because the author wove in the tale of the bears w/the fate of the Libertarians. He has a knack for portraying personalities and frenetic scenes w/few appropriate words. It is a quick fun relaxing read and I recommend it. FYI, I have recommended it to the Libertarians I lunched with. I am sure their stubborn personalities will not allow them to read about a Libertarian fail. One more thing ... when I started lunching w/the group, I was actually concerned that their ideas could pick up speed and at some point they might be a force, especially when the Goldwater Institute has a rather substantial membership. This book completely puts that frightful nightmare at rest. Don't be fooled when "true" libertarians say the characters in the book are anarchists, not Libertarians. Indeed this how the Libertarian agenda unfolds ... it is where the philosophy leads. Enjoy!
32 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2020
Verified Purchase
This book is about a very serious topic - the impact of a Libertarian - and ursine - takeover on the small town of Grafton. And yet, the style is engaging, funny without being nasty, and quite sympathetic to all the humans involved and even most of the bears. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it, and realized how much I'd learned about the topics only when I finished the book. The author weaves in taxes, public services, bear policies, income disparities, toxoplasmosis, the VA, fire-fighting, forest encampments, religion, and taxes. Did I mention taxes? And bears.
28 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2020
I grew up in the town this book was written about. The moment I saw that a book had been written about the crazy stuff that happened I immediately bought it.
First and foremost, the author has a talent for historical deep dives. While not necessarily relevant to the stories being told in the book, he has several entertaining sections that meander through the settlement of new england.
I enjoyed reliving some of the memories about my hometown, especially our tiny library. His description of the FSP’s disastrous town meeting was spot on. The interviews with John Babiarz painted a phenomenal picture of our small town.
Unfortunate, that’s about where the accuracy ends.
The author’s view of small town operations is clearly disconnected from reality. As an example, he interviews one of the few residents that lives on Wild Meadow Road. I lived half a mile from there and walked my dog down that road regularly. The author implies that because those darned libertarians slashed taxes, the town was unable to keep the road plowed. Anyone who’s been there knows the real reason: there’s an extremely steep section that’s unsafe to drive on in the winter, even for plows! The rest of the road does get plowed, but since the road only has a handful of houses on it and sees very little traffic, it’s one of the last ones to get plowed out.
Another example is the struggling fire department. If you believe the author, those pesky libertarians are to blame! Unfortunately, fire departments across the country are struggling for both members and funding. It’s exceptionally bad in rural areas, where a population of 1000 simply can’t afford a $500,000 fire engine and $800,000 per year for one crew of paid firefighters, no matter how high the taxes are.
I broke out laughing when he seriously suggested that a parasite was controlling the town, causing crazy behavior.
But what about the bears? The author is clear that a long-time town resident spent a huge amount of money feeding the bears twice a day, causing aggressive behavior. Some of the libertarians that moved to the area had to learn the hard way how to live in bear country (just like non-libertarians do when they move to Grafton). That’s… about it. Based on the title I was expecting some “gotcha” moment, but it seems to be missing, along with any sense of cohesive narrative.
First and foremost, the author has a talent for historical deep dives. While not necessarily relevant to the stories being told in the book, he has several entertaining sections that meander through the settlement of new england.
I enjoyed reliving some of the memories about my hometown, especially our tiny library. His description of the FSP’s disastrous town meeting was spot on. The interviews with John Babiarz painted a phenomenal picture of our small town.
Unfortunate, that’s about where the accuracy ends.
The author’s view of small town operations is clearly disconnected from reality. As an example, he interviews one of the few residents that lives on Wild Meadow Road. I lived half a mile from there and walked my dog down that road regularly. The author implies that because those darned libertarians slashed taxes, the town was unable to keep the road plowed. Anyone who’s been there knows the real reason: there’s an extremely steep section that’s unsafe to drive on in the winter, even for plows! The rest of the road does get plowed, but since the road only has a handful of houses on it and sees very little traffic, it’s one of the last ones to get plowed out.
Another example is the struggling fire department. If you believe the author, those pesky libertarians are to blame! Unfortunately, fire departments across the country are struggling for both members and funding. It’s exceptionally bad in rural areas, where a population of 1000 simply can’t afford a $500,000 fire engine and $800,000 per year for one crew of paid firefighters, no matter how high the taxes are.
I broke out laughing when he seriously suggested that a parasite was controlling the town, causing crazy behavior.
But what about the bears? The author is clear that a long-time town resident spent a huge amount of money feeding the bears twice a day, causing aggressive behavior. Some of the libertarians that moved to the area had to learn the hard way how to live in bear country (just like non-libertarians do when they move to Grafton). That’s… about it. Based on the title I was expecting some “gotcha” moment, but it seems to be missing, along with any sense of cohesive narrative.
49 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2020
Verified Purchase
This book is well written, very funny, and sheds light on the ideology and reality of a small town hellbent on living free. The writing is very visual and the story is stranger than fiction. This is one of those books you end up burning through in a few days.
14 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries
Peer Sylvester
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interessante Geschichte, aber chaotisch erzählt
Reviewed in Germany on February 12, 2021Verified Purchase
"Libertarians" sind eine politische Bewegung in den USA, die möglichst gar keinen Staat haben wollen und absolute Priorität auf die individuelle Freiheit legen. Daher lehnen sie Steuern ab, alles sollte freiwillig privat finanziert werden und auf seinem Grundstückm und mit seinen Sachen sollte man tun können was man will - ob man Bären füttert oder im Waldbrandgebiet Müll verbrennt oder Bären jagd (alles Beispiele, die hier tatsächlich beschrieben werden). Der Traum dieser Bewegung war es immer sich in den Stadtrat wählen zu lassen und eine "freie Utopie" dort zu gründen, so wie Ayn Rand sie beschreibt, die nur von den Gesetzen des Marktes regiert wird und jedem erlaubt zu tun, was sie belieben.
Dieses Buch erzählt nun die Geschichte was passiert, wenn das tatsächlich gelingt. Die Stadt liegt in New England und ziemlich in der Wildnis. Die Bilanz des Experiments: Die Stadt ist weiter zerfallen, die Libertarier sind untereinader zerstritten, es wurde nichts wirklich unterstützt, so dass Projekte eingeschlafen sind und im Vergleich zur Nachbarstatd, die auch nicht viele Steuern zahlen, ist die Bevölkerung unglücklich. Und es gibt ein Bärenproblem.
Das Buch ist witzig und interessant und zeigt die zahlreichen Probleme auf, die sich aus diesen libertarischen Gedanken ergeben. Allerdings wollte der Autor die Geschichte unbedingt über Anekdoten der Einwohner bezahlen und so interessant und unterhaltend die auch sind: Es fehlt der rote Faden. Es ist eben nicht so leicht, zu sagen: Die LIberatrier kommen und damit kam es zu mehr Bärenangriffen. Es passierte jede Menge, aber nicht alles gehört zusammen und nicht alles wird in der richtigen Reihenfolge erzählt. Manche Kapitel sind witzig, haben aber nichts mit der Geschichte zu tun. Andere sind unglaublich wichtig - z.B. wenn es um die Statistiken und den Vergleich mit dem Nachbardorf geht- um das Gesamtbild zu verstehen und es nicht als "waren halöt inkompetente/unsympathische Leute" abzutun, aber diese Kapitel stehen nicht im Zentrum des Buches.
Dem Autor kann ich nur zugute halten, dass er einen interessanten Aspekt und viele Faszetten des Themas "Wozu ist der Staat und die Steuern eigentlich gut?" aufgreift und in die Öffentlichkeit stellt. Aber es ist leicht zu sehen, dass eine bessere Aufbereitung des Themas wünschenswert gewesen wäre.
Dieses Buch erzählt nun die Geschichte was passiert, wenn das tatsächlich gelingt. Die Stadt liegt in New England und ziemlich in der Wildnis. Die Bilanz des Experiments: Die Stadt ist weiter zerfallen, die Libertarier sind untereinader zerstritten, es wurde nichts wirklich unterstützt, so dass Projekte eingeschlafen sind und im Vergleich zur Nachbarstatd, die auch nicht viele Steuern zahlen, ist die Bevölkerung unglücklich. Und es gibt ein Bärenproblem.
Das Buch ist witzig und interessant und zeigt die zahlreichen Probleme auf, die sich aus diesen libertarischen Gedanken ergeben. Allerdings wollte der Autor die Geschichte unbedingt über Anekdoten der Einwohner bezahlen und so interessant und unterhaltend die auch sind: Es fehlt der rote Faden. Es ist eben nicht so leicht, zu sagen: Die LIberatrier kommen und damit kam es zu mehr Bärenangriffen. Es passierte jede Menge, aber nicht alles gehört zusammen und nicht alles wird in der richtigen Reihenfolge erzählt. Manche Kapitel sind witzig, haben aber nichts mit der Geschichte zu tun. Andere sind unglaublich wichtig - z.B. wenn es um die Statistiken und den Vergleich mit dem Nachbardorf geht- um das Gesamtbild zu verstehen und es nicht als "waren halöt inkompetente/unsympathische Leute" abzutun, aber diese Kapitel stehen nicht im Zentrum des Buches.
Dem Autor kann ich nur zugute halten, dass er einen interessanten Aspekt und viele Faszetten des Themas "Wozu ist der Staat und die Steuern eigentlich gut?" aufgreift und in die Öffentlichkeit stellt. Aber es ist leicht zu sehen, dass eine bessere Aufbereitung des Themas wünschenswert gewesen wäre.
Miguel Angel Ruiz Ferrer
5.0 out of 5 stars
Interesante y original
Reviewed in Spain on December 12, 2020Verified Purchase
Muy recomendable, perfecto para estos tiempos: es demasiada libertad buena?
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