Over the course of his career, Andrew Sullivan has never shied away from staking out bold positions on social and political issues. A fiercely independent conservative, in 1989 he wrote the first national cover story in favor of marriage equality, and then an essay, "The Politics of Homosexuality" in The New Republic in 1993, an article called the most influential of the decade in the gay rights movement. A pioneer of online journalism, he started blogging in 2000, and helped define the new medium with his blog, The Daily Dish. In 2007, he was one of the first political writers to champion the presidential campaign of Barack Obama, and his cover story for The Atlantic, "Why Obama Matters," was seen as a milestone in that campaign's messaging. In the past five years, he has proved a fierce foe both of Donald Trump and of wokeness on the left. Loved and loathed by both left and right, Sullivan is in a tribe of one.
Now, Out on a Limb showcases the groundbreaking pieces that put this fearless intellectual on the map as well as the quintessential writings that cemented his legacy, including his pioneering defense of same-sex marriage, his prescient critiques of American conservatism and the drug war, his campaign to expose and abolish Bush-era torture policies that Senate investigator Daniel Jones credited with leading America away from the practice, his examination of Catholicism and its future, and his 2007 cover story on Barack Obama that Obama speechwriter Ben Rhodes says "articulated the rationale for Obama before it was widely apparent." He has also been warning for decades of the Republican Party's authoritarian turn, and in 2016 described the rise of Donald Trump as an "extinction level event" for American democracy.
Bold, timely, and thought-provoking, this collection of Sullivan's greatest arguments on culture, politics, religion, and philosophy demonstrates why he continues to be one of the most intriguing and influential figures in US media.
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