This collection brims with subdued, self-aware brilliance. -Publishers Weekly A lively, enlightening, and occasionally disturbing book that envisions the future as already broken. -Kirkus Reviews Taking on our relationships with the places we've called home, our myths, our social biases, and our ecological concerns for the future, McPherson offers a soul-searching, though not bleak series of think pieces designed to get us all asking more questions. -Booklist It is . . . the perfect time for a book such as The History of the Future, which pulls no punches as it investigates the foibles of our nation through a series of eight warning essays. . . . [Edward] proves himself to be a master chronicler of our nation's incongruous trajectory. -Star Tribune In his energetic and incisive collection of essays, The History of the Future, McPherson thoughtfully examines seven markedly different American sites. In doing so, he zeros in on the manner in which cultural representation and the pull of nostalgia skewer our self-image at this critical juncture in American history, too often steering us away from our most pressing concerns. His often quirky study reveals the suppressed violence that ravages our communities' social harmony as well as the environmental balance we so desperately need to preserve. -St. Louis Post-Dispatch The History of the Future should be required reading for those who grapple with understanding our past. -Heavy Feather Review Taken together, this travelogue of the familiar and the strange exposes multiple anxieties latent in the national subconscious: racial inequalities, the dread of disaster, the chase after short-term profits, the eroding meaning of home. McPherson's depth of research, the inventiveness of his prose, and his sensitivity to municipal undercurrents make this a first-rate work of social analysis. -Los Angeles Review of Books, Above and Below the Fruited Plain: On Edward McPherson's `The History of the Future' Edward McPherson's The History of the Future: American Essays ... is both enjoyable and educational. It also strongly positions itself within the framework of this golden age of the essay we're currently experiencing. -Milkweed Books Blog Rather than wax nostalgic about a mythical Past-That-Never-Was, McPherson instead teases out the grand ambition of a bygone era, of a reach that far exceeded its grasp and designs for a future that never quote materialized as planned. -Rain Taxi McPherson's essays are everything essays should be: in love with the mundane, inquisitive, personal while still aimed at unpacking the wider world in new and interesting ways. -NewPages In The History of the Future, McPherson explores America in all its beauty and strangeness. He is funny and searching-a joy to read. -Elizabeth Kolbert Edward McPherson's meditations on the United States-from its soaring, vulnerable architecture to its deep underground tunnels-are bracing in their acknowledgment of what's been lost to time and his anxieties about what's ahead. This is a smart and beautifully written book about America. -Rebecca Traister The History of the Future is a book of astonishments: in these essays we are taken on a series of journeys around America to half-secret places where the soul of the country is hidden away. Edward McPherson is a wonderful tour guide: intelligent, funny, and urbane, he never seems disconcerted by the everyday wonders he shows us. If you thought you knew America, read this book; you will find yourself surprised, dismayed, and delighted by the truths he has found and the stories he tells. -Charles Baxter