GAMES: GameSpot | GameFAQs | SportsGamer MUSIC: Last.fm | MP3.com MOVIES: Metacritic | Movietome TV: TV.com
Home | About Metacritic | About Metascores | What's New | Wireless Versions | Discussion Forums | Advertising Inquiries | Contact Us | RSS
Metacritic.com: We Deal With Criticism
     Help
> Switch to Advanced Search  
Film Video/DVD Music Games TV

Books

All-Time High Scores
Best Of 2006
Best Of 2005
Best Of 2004
How Metascores Are Calculated
Discuss Books In Our Forums

 

Upcoming & Recent Releases

sort by name sort by score

 

Upcoming & Recent Releases

sort by name sort by score

Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed books.

 

 



Printer-Friendly Version Email This Page Discuss In Our Forums

What We've Lost
How The Bush Administration Has Curtailed Our Freedoms, Mortgaged Our Economy, Ravaged Our Environment, And Damaged Our Standing In The World
by Graydon Carter

What We've Lost reviews
Critic Score
Metascore: 40 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
N/A out of 10
based on 10 reviews
read critic reviews
how did we calculate this?
based on 0 votes
read user comments
rate this book

What We've Lost addresses the fragile state of U.S. democracy with a critical review of the Bush administration by "Vanity Fair" magazine editors Graydon Carter who provides a sweeping, painstakingly detailed account of the ruinous effects of this president. [Farrar, Straus and Giroux]

Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 352 pages
09/08/2004
$25.00

ISBN: 0374288925

Nonfiction
Current Events & Politics

What The Critics Said

All reviews are classified as one of five grades: Outstanding (4 points), Favorable (3), Mixed (2), Unfavorable (1) and Terrible (0). To calculate the Metascore, we divide total points achieved by the total points possible (i.e., 4 x the number of reviews), with the resulting percentage (multiplied by 100) being the Metascore. Learn more...

Daily Telegraph Raymond Seitz
His passionate, relentless indictment of the Bush Administration is anchored by facts and figures, which he presents in a lean, bullet-point format.
Read Full Review
The Nation George Scialabba
Surprisingly plainspoken, free of grandiloquence or snarkiness--and none the worse for it.
Read Full Review
Washington Post Kevin Phillips
There's more sophisticated documentation inside than the glib capsule might suggest.
Read Full Review
The Guardian Emma Brockes
The result is so overwhelming that it reads a little as if someone has fed "Bush, presidency, fuck up" into a search engine on the internet and loosely organised the results.
Read Full Review
Publishers Weekly
Basically a branded, annotated list-one tailored to a ready audience that is looking for facts to throw at undecided neighbors as debate heats up.
Read Full Review
The Globe And Mail [Toronto] Martin Levin
The real problem with What We've Lost (the Canadian edition should have been called What They've Lost) is that it lacks any sense of voice. Too often, it feels like a cut-and-paste job, its material assembled from other sources and full of paper-eating lists...What I wanted was to hear Graydon Carter himself, being smart and informed and angry and mischievous and witty, not merely this collage of conduct unbecoming. Too much data, too little passion.
Read Full Review
New York Observer Toby Young
Though adamant, What We've Lost is not particularly interesting. Compiled with a team of a dozen or so researchers, it reads like an anti-Bush primer that's been pieced together by some low-level functionary on the Democratic National Committee.
Read Full Review
The New York Times Book Review Jacob Weisberg
An underwritten compendium of data. Carter is constantly breaking prose stride in favor of bullet points, and at one point pads out 13 pages with an alphabetical listing of the coalition dead in Iraq. One can almost hear the author wheezing as he staggers across the finish line, with a chapter that recapitulates his previous complaints about the Bush administration Harper's-Index-style.
Read Full Review
Wall Street Journal Russ Smith
To be charitable, an embarrassment that one hopes the accomplished magazine editor will some day dismiss as a miscue...Mr. Carter's book has a clip-and-paste, rush-to-marketplace feel. A young journalism student could have produced a similar effort in the space of three months.
Read Full Review
Los Angeles Times Marty Kaplan
Carter gives us the gift of Googling monkeys, the kind of thing that caffeinated undergraduates churn out on all-nighters...Unfortunately, the answer to "What We've Lost" seems to be the 25 bucks the book costs.
Read Full Review

What Our Users Said

Vote Now!The average user rating for this book is 0.0 (out of 10) based on 0 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Discuss this book in our forums

Return to top of page
Home | FILM | DVD/VIDEO | MUSIC | GAMES | TV | Forums | About Metacritic metacritic.com

Popular on CBS sites: MLB | Spore | iPhone 3G | Paris Hilton | Antivirus Software | GPS | Recipes | Shwayze | NFL

About CBS Interactive | Jobs | Advertise

© 2008 CBS Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use