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When the Clock Broke

Con Men, Conspiracists and the Origins of Trumpism

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When the Clock Broke

By: John Ganz
Narrated by: Eric Jason Martin
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • A BARACK OBAMA SUMMER PICK


A rollicking, revelatory look at the tumult of the early 1990s and the rise of a new, more berserk America that birthed the Donald Trump Era

When the Clock Broke is leagues more insightful on the subject of Trump’s ascent than most writing that purports to address the issue directly’ Washington Post

‘Terrific . . . Vibrant . . . When the Clock Broke is one of those rarest of books: unflaggingly entertaining while never losing sight of its moral core’ New York Times

With the Soviet Union extinct, Saddam Hussein defeated and US power at its zenith, the early 1990s promised a ‘kinder, gentler America.’ Instead, it was a period of punishing economic hardship, rising anger and domestic strife, setting the tone for the polarization and resurgent extremism we know today.

The early 1990s climate of despair was weaponized by con men, conspiracists and racists – notably the former grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan David Duke – both in the wider culture and at the ballot box. In other words, they sought to ‘break the clock’ of progress and ‘repeal the twentieth century’. They gave Americans’ resentment a shape and direction, and forged a new kind of paranoid, conspiratorial politics where harmless roguishness and vicious hate became mixed up, as well as declaring a culture war on liberal elites. It was in this moral confusion that the ‘indigenous American berserk’, as Philip Roth put it, took on new and ever-wilder forms.

In this rollicking, original and often hilarious book, John Ganz narrates the fall of the Reagan order and the rise of the conspiratorial politics that birthed Donald Trump’s America.

One of the Washington Post’s 10 Best Books of 2024
One of the New York Times’ 100 Notable Books of 2024
Longlisted for the National Book Critics Circle Award 2024


© John Ganz 2025 (P) Penguin Audio 2025

Americas Media Studies Politics & Government Social Sciences United States World Social justice Liberalism Socialism Witty Funny Democrat Taxation Capitalism

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Critic reviews

John Ganz shows how the 1992 US election was a dress rehearsal for the triumph of Trump . . . Ganz, a journalist by trade, is a fine historian; he brings clarity to events we remember but perhaps did not fully understand. Rollicking stories are offered instead of bludgeoning polemic (Gerard De Groot)
When the Clock Broke is so terrifying, so convincing in its depiction of the 1980s I absorbed as a child, so unusually stylish in its sentences, that it haunted me long afterwards (Adam Thirlwell)
A fascinating, provocative challenge to our age – passionate, unexpected, illuminating (Rory Stewart)
Clear and convincing . . . A spry and superbly written book on 1990s American politics . . . the best account I have ever read on the origins of Trumpism . . . brilliant (Tomiwa Owolade)
In When the Clock Broke, John Ganz offers a continuously absorbing and bracing genealogy of today’s incontinent far-right. A must-read for those wondering why the collapse of communism did not bring about the end of the history, and instead inaugurated the apotheosis of fanatics in the free world (Pankaj Mishra)
Ganz discovers a moment of rupture . . . Rather than reading the 1990s as a decade of “posts”, Ganz understands them as prefigurative: pre-alt-right, pre-MAGA, pre-DOGE . . . fascinating (William Davies)
A terrific new book . . . Vibrant . . . Ganz has the skills of a gifted storyteller - one with excellent comedic timing, too - slipping in the most absurd and telling details . . . Urgent and illuminating . . . When the Clock Broke is one of those rarest of books: unflaggingly entertaining while never losing sight of its moral core (Jennifer Szalai)
When the Clock Broke is leagues more insightful on the subject of Trump's ascent than most writing that purports to address the issue directly (Becca Rothfield)
A fascinating shadow story of the 1990s (Ezra Klein)
Masterly . . . Ganz spotlights the rage and rancour that spread beneath the surface of American life in a period now remembered for its peace and prosperity (Kyle Burke)
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