A NEW YORKER BEST BOOK OF 2024
The "entertaining and insightful" first history of the Yuppie phenomenon, chronicling the roots, rise, triumph and (seeming) fall of the young urban professionals who radically altered American life between 1980 and 1987 (New York Times bestselling author Ben Mezrich).
By the time their obituary was being written in the late 1980s, Yuppies--the elite, uber-educated faction of the Baby Boom generation--had become a cultural punchline. But amidst the Yuppies' preoccupation with money, work, and the latest status symbols, something serious was happening, too, something that continues to have profound ramifications on American culture four decades later.
Brimming with lively and nostalgic details (think Jane Fonda, The Sharper Image, and over-the-top fashion), Triumph of the Yuppies charts Boomers' transformation from hippy idealists in the late 1960s to careerists in the early 1980s, and details how marketers, the media, and politicians pivoted to appeal to this influential new group. Yuppie values had an undeniable impact on the worlds of fashion, food, and fitness, as well as affecting the broader culture--from gentrification and an obsession with career success to an indulgent materialism. Most significantly, the me-first mindset typical of Yuppieness helped create the largest income inequality in a century.
Tom McGrath's masterful cultural history reveals how Yuppies reshaped American society. It is a portrait of America just as it was beginning to come apart--and the origin story of the fractured country we live in today.
"Engaging, well-researched and breezy... a reminder of the havoc the boomer generation has wrought--and will continue to wreak, since it now plans to live forever. But the book also provides a useful reverse roadmap for reviving a more humane existence."
--Bloomberg
" A witty and occasionally sobering account of the era in which the haves and the have-nots broke up for good."--Boston Globe
"Highly readable...McGrath questions where Yuppies came from, whether they've really disappeared, and how much impact they had in the overall direction of the country. He doesn't miss a beat."--New York Post
"Tom McGrath offers a lively popular history of the 1980s centered on the rise and the eclipse of the Yuppies."--Shelf Awareness
"A beguiling look at an era that inaugurated an ever-widening rift between a self-satisfied elite and a resentful working class."--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Insightful and immensely entertaining."--Kirkus (starred review)
"If you want to understand why the economic disparity, polarized politics, and rampant excesses of the Reagan eighties still haunt these Divided States of America, Triumph of the Yuppies is a Rosetta Stone. Make room on your bookshelf for Tom McGrath's ideal companion volume to Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities, Steve Gillon's Boomer Nation, David Brooks' Bobos in Paradise, and Susan Faludi's Backlash."
--David Friend, author of The Naughty NinetiesTom McGrath wasthe editor-in-chief of Philadelphia magazine, as well as chief content officer of Metro Corp., the parent company of Philadelphia and Boston between 2010 and 2020. Under his leadership, the magazines won more than fifty awards for editorial excellence. In 2022, he was named Writer of the Year at the National City and Regional Magazine Awards. He's written two previous books: MTV: The Making of a Revolution, and, with John Basedow, Fitness Made Simple.
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