Money and Class in America

With a new foreword by the author and a new Introduction by
THOMAS FRANK

“Without doubt our greatest satirist-elegant, honorable, learned and fair. I love reading him.”

—Kurt Vonnegut

“Lewis Lapham-born of Mark Twain and H. L. Mencken-is the most provocative and engaging essayist in the country.”

—George Plimpton

“Amusing and provocative.”

The New York Times
£15

Adding to cart… The item has been added
  • 352 pages
  • Paperback ISBN 9781682191576
  • E-book ISBN 9781682191583

about the bookabout

In the United States, happiness and wealth are often regarded as synonymous. Consumerism, greed, and the insatiable desire for more is an American obsession. Following the native tradition of Twain, Veblen, and Mencken, the editor of Lapham's Quarterly here examines our worship of Mammon.

Focusing on the wealthy sybarites of New York City, whom Lapham has been able to observe firsthand in their natural habitat, Money and Class in America is a caustic, and often hilarious, portrait of a segment of the American population who, in the thirty years since the book was originally written, have become only further removed-both in terms of wealth and social awareness—from everyone else.

Revised, and with a new introduction by What's the Matter With Kansas author Thomas Frank, this skewering of America's super-rich is perhaps still more pertinent today than when it first appeared.


“We should honor and respect Lapham, and all his works . . . Like Gore Vidal and Christopher Hitchens, in whose ballpark he is worthy to play, the predicament is of the civilized man who has become a relentless chronicler of the awfulness of American politics.”

Nicholas Lezard, The Guardian

About The Author / Editor

Photograph © Loubna Mrie Lewis H. Lapham is the founding Editor of Lapham's Quarterly and the Editor Emeritus of Harper's. His columns received the National Magazine Award in 1995 for exhibiting "an exhilarating point of view in an age of conformity", and, in 2002, the Thomas Paine Journalism Award. He was inducted into the American Society of Magazine Editor's Hall of Fame in 2007. His other books include Money and Class in America, Fortune's Child, Imperial Masquerade, The Wish for Kings, Hotel America, Waiting for the Barbarians, Theater of War, The Agony of Mammon, Gag Rule, Pretensions to Empire, and Age of Folly.

Preview

Note - all monetary values here are in 1985 dollars, less than half of the amount adjusted for inflation in the period to 2018.

At Yale University in the middle 1950's the man whom I prefer to call George Amory I knew chiefly by virtue of his reputation for wrecking automobiles. He was the heir to what was said to be a large Long Island fortune, and I remember him as a blond and handsome tennis player embodying the ideal of insouciant elegance seen in a tailor's window. During the whole of our senior year I doubt that I spoke to Amory more than once or twice; we would likely have seen one another in a crowd, probably at a fraternity beer party, and I assume that we exchanged what we thought were witty observations about the differences between the girls from Vassar and those from Smith. At random intervals during the 1960's and 1970's I heard rumors of Amory's exploits in the stock market and the south of France, but I hadn't seen him for almost thirty years when, shortly after President Reagan's second inaugural in the winter of 1985, I ran across him in the bar of the Plaza Hotel. He seemed somehow smaller than I remembered, not as blond or as careless. Ordinarily we would have nodded at one another without a word of recognition, and I remember being alarmed when Amory carried his drink to my table and abruptly began to recite what he apparently regarded as the epic poem of his economic defeat. Presumably he chose me as his confessor because we scarcely knew each other, much less belonged to the same social circles. I wasn't apt to repeat what I heard to anybody whom he thought important enough to matter.

"I'm nothing", he said. "You understand that, nothing. I earn $250,000 a year, but it's nothing, and I'm nobody".

Amory at Yale had assumed that the world would entertain him as its guest. He had little reason to think otherwise. Together with his grandmother's collection of impressionist paintings and the houses in Southampton and Maine, he looked forward to inheriting a substantial income. Certainly it never had occurred to him that he might be obliged to suffer the indignity of balancing his checkbook or looking at a bill.

in the media

Money and Class in America

With a new foreword by the author and a new Introduction by
THOMAS FRANK

“Without doubt our greatest satirist-elegant, honorable, learned and fair. I love reading him.”

—Kurt Vonnegut

“Lewis Lapham-born of Mark Twain and H. L. Mencken-is the most provocative and engaging essayist in the country.”

—George Plimpton

“Amusing and provocative.”

The New York Times
£15

Add to Cart

Adding to cart… The item has been added

about the bookabout

In the United States, happiness and wealth are often regarded as synonymous. Consumerism, greed, and the insatiable desire for more is an American obsession. Following the native tradition of Twain, Veblen, and Mencken, the editor of Lapham's Quarterly here examines our worship of Mammon.

Focusing on the wealthy sybarites of New York City, whom Lapham has been able to observe firsthand in their natural habitat, Money and Class in America is a caustic, and often hilarious, portrait of a segment of the American population who, in the thirty years since the book was originally written, have become only further removed-both in terms of wealth and social awareness—from everyone else.

Revised, and with a new introduction by What's the Matter With Kansas author Thomas Frank, this skewering of America's super-rich is perhaps still more pertinent today than when it first appeared.


“We should honor and respect Lapham, and all his works . . . Like Gore Vidal and Christopher Hitchens, in whose ballpark he is worthy to play, the predicament is of the civilized man who has become a relentless chronicler of the awfulness of American politics.”

Nicholas Lezard, The Guardian

About The Author / Editor

Photograph © Loubna Mrie Lewis H. Lapham is the founding Editor of Lapham's Quarterly and the Editor Emeritus of Harper's. His columns received the National Magazine Award in 1995 for exhibiting "an exhilarating point of view in an age of conformity", and, in 2002, the Thomas Paine Journalism Award. He was inducted into the American Society of Magazine Editor's Hall of Fame in 2007. His other books include Money and Class in America, Fortune's Child, Imperial Masquerade, The Wish for Kings, Hotel America, Waiting for the Barbarians, Theater of War, The Agony of Mammon, Gag Rule, Pretensions to Empire, and Age of Folly.

Preview

Note - all monetary values here are in 1985 dollars, less than half of the amount adjusted for inflation in the period to 2018.

At Yale University in the middle 1950's the man whom I prefer to call George Amory I knew chiefly by virtue of his reputation for wrecking automobiles. He was the heir to what was said to be a large Long Island fortune, and I remember him as a blond and handsome tennis player embodying the ideal of insouciant elegance seen in a tailor's window. During the whole of our senior year I doubt that I spoke to Amory more than once or twice; we would likely have seen one another in a crowd, probably at a fraternity beer party, and I assume that we exchanged what we thought were witty observations about the differences between the girls from Vassar and those from Smith. At random intervals during the 1960's and 1970's I heard rumors of Amory's exploits in the stock market and the south of France, but I hadn't seen him for almost thirty years when, shortly after President Reagan's second inaugural in the winter of 1985, I ran across him in the bar of the Plaza Hotel. He seemed somehow smaller than I remembered, not as blond or as careless. Ordinarily we would have nodded at one another without a word of recognition, and I remember being alarmed when Amory carried his drink to my table and abruptly began to recite what he apparently regarded as the epic poem of his economic defeat. Presumably he chose me as his confessor because we scarcely knew each other, much less belonged to the same social circles. I wasn't apt to repeat what I heard to anybody whom he thought important enough to matter.

"I'm nothing", he said. "You understand that, nothing. I earn $250,000 a year, but it's nothing, and I'm nobody".

Amory at Yale had assumed that the world would entertain him as its guest. He had little reason to think otherwise. Together with his grandmother's collection of impressionist paintings and the houses in Southampton and Maine, he looked forward to inheriting a substantial income. Certainly it never had occurred to him that he might be obliged to suffer the indignity of balancing his checkbook or looking at a bill.

in the media