Skip to content
  • Search All Online Programs
  • How to Use This Website
  • Bookshop
  • Authors A-Z
  • Browse
    • Children’s Alley Online
      • Healthy Bodies, Happy Kids!
      • Maker Faire Miami: Invent and Experiment!
      • One World, Many Stories
      • Picnic de libros
      • TapTap Krik? Krak!
      • The Paintbox
      • The Rhythm Factory
      • Tinker, Make, Innovate!
      • Mr. Wembly Wordsmith: Storytorium
    • Children’s + Teens
      • Picture Books
      • Middle Grade Books
      • Young Adult Books
    • Comics
    • Fiction
    • Here In Florida
    • IberoAmerican
    • Live from MDC
    • Live Streams
    • Nonfiction
    • On Demand
    • Panel
    • Poetry
    • Q&A
    • ReadCaribbean
    • The Big Read
    • Year Round
  • Buy Tickets
Menu
  • Search All Online Programs
  • How to Use This Website
  • Bookshop
  • Authors A-Z
  • Browse
    • Children’s Alley Online
      • Healthy Bodies, Happy Kids!
      • Maker Faire Miami: Invent and Experiment!
      • One World, Many Stories
      • Picnic de libros
      • TapTap Krik? Krak!
      • The Paintbox
      • The Rhythm Factory
      • Tinker, Make, Innovate!
      • Mr. Wembly Wordsmith: Storytorium
    • Children’s + Teens
      • Picture Books
      • Middle Grade Books
      • Young Adult Books
    • Comics
    • Fiction
    • Here In Florida
    • IberoAmerican
    • Live from MDC
    • Live Streams
    • Nonfiction
    • On Demand
    • Panel
    • Poetry
    • Q&A
    • ReadCaribbean
    • The Big Read
    • Year Round
  • Buy Tickets
LOGIN | REGISTER

Lozada, Carlos

It is an irony of our age that a man who rarely reads has unleashed an onslaught of books about his tenure and his time. So posits Carlos Lozada, nonfiction book critic of The Washington Post and the winner of the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for criticism. There have been tomes dissecting the white working class; manifestos of political resistance; works on identity, gender, and migration; and revelations of White House mayhem. Lozada has read just about all of them. In What Were We Thinking: A Brief Intellectual History of the Trump Era (Simon & Schuster) he draws on some 150 recent volumes to explore our understanding of ourselves in the Trump era. Whether examining a bestselling title or a little-known work, Lozada’s focus is not the former president, his advisers, or his antagonists, but rather the political and cultural ideas at play – and at stake – in America. He offers a provocative argument that whether written by liberals or conservatives, activists or academics, true believers or harsh critics, the common thread running through the books of Trump’s America is this: They suffer from some of the same failures of imagination that facilitated his presidency in the first place. Described by The New York Times as “crisp, engaging and very smart …” the book provides “a simple, piercing clarity to many of Lozada’s observations.”

Participating Events

On Demand
May 2, 2025

Lozada, Carlos

by
It is an irony of our age that a man who rarely reads has unleashed an onslaught of books about his tenure and his
View Event
Add to watchlist

Please login to add this event to your watchlist.

Login
  • Bookshop
  • Sponsors
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Creating Cultural Miami = Priceless

Support the Miami Book Fair and be part of Miami’s commitment to expanding and strengthening Miami’s literary culture.

DONATE NOW

Miami Dade College is an equal access/equal opportunity institution which does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, marital status, age, religion, national origin, disability, veteran’s status, ethnicity, pregnancy, sexual orientation or genetic information. To obtain more information about the College’s equal access and equal opportunity policies, procedures and practices, please contact the College’s Civil Rights Compliance Officer: Cindy Lau Evans, Director, Equal Opportunity Programs/ ADA Coordinator/ Title IX Coordinator, at (305) 237-2577(Voice) or 711 (Relay Service). 11011 SW 104 St., Room 1102-01; Miami, FL 33176. CRCTitleIXADA@mdc.edu.

300 N.E. Second Avenue, Miami, Florida 33132 • 305-237-3258
Copyright © 2021 All rights reserved