Slim but foreceful...a compelling and provocative guide to anyone seeking to understand the prominence and power of evangelicalism in modern America. -Marginalia Review of Books An ideal text for understanding the 1970s to the present. Miller's well-written and extensively researched narrative demonstrates the centrality of religion in the last forty-five years of America life.- Journal of Southern Religion Attractive, informed, and accessible contemporary history ideally suited for assignment in surveys of postwar America.-American Historical Review Mr. Miller's account of the rise and recent decline of evangelicalism in American politics and society is consistently incisive and well-researched... The Age of Evangelicalism is one of the most efficient and well-rounded accounts of the evangelical movement in America to appear in recent years. It deserves a wide non-specialist audience. --Barton Swaim, Wall Street Journal Whether expressing nostalgia or bidding good riddance, such a title invites us to pay serious attention to the thing as it passes or, as the case may be, falls apart. Miller's is just such an invitation... When we consider evangelicalism as an age, not a subculture, we realize that evangelicals are by no means its only or even primary protagonists. Approaching the age of evangelicalism in this way changes everything. --Timothy Beal, Chronicle Review [Miller] writes with both gravitas and playfulness, with deep seriousness about America's born-again dispensation and an energizing wit that entices us to follow along. The result of Miller's sparkling skill is a short but enthralling book which... will be seen as conversation-shifting. --Darren Dochuk, Books & Culture Histories of American evangelicalism abound, but the uniqueness of The Age of Evangelicalism is its insistence that born-again history is not simply the story of evangelicals themselves. While most histories of American evangelicalism focus on its most prominent voices -- the Billy Grahams, Jimmy Carters, Pat Robertsons, Rick Warrens, and Jim Wallises -- Miller begins with a different inquiry: what has evangelicalism meant and how has it been understood by American society? - Betsy Shirley, Englewood Review of Books Miller's designation of an 'age of evangelicalism' is important... The shift from 'subculture' to 'age' allows Miller to engage evangelicalism from within and without. --Edward J. Blum, Christian Century [S]eminal... I do not know of another book that more effectively tells the story of American evangelicalism's ascendancy and (perhaps) its political collapse, from Jimmy Carter to Barack Obama. --Thomas S. Kidd, The Gospel Coalition If you want an event-by-event account of the evangelical relationship to the State, this book is it -- richly documented, balanced in judgment, and wide in scope . . . --Scot McKnight, Jesus Creed In this provocative and beautifully written book, Steven P. Miller reveals an uncomfortable truth: that this is the evangelicals' world and the rest of us just live in it. With keen insight and smart analysis, Miller demonstrates how for the past forty years, from Tammy Faye's eyelashes to Jeremiah Wright's 'God Damn America!,' Americans of all stripes saw their culture through born-again glasses. Scholars and general readers alike will be wrestling with his incisive arguments for years to come. --Matthew Avery Sutton, author of Aimee Semple McPherson and the Resurrection of Christian America The Age of Evangelicalism is the most cogent and illuminating narrative I have ever read about one of the most significant religious--and, yes, political--movements of our time. It is a short book that fulfills a big ambition. --Michael Kazin, author of American Dreamers: How the Left Changed a Nation Compelling, intelligent, elegantly written-there aren't enough superlatives for this book. The Age of Evangelicalism will become the standard account of evangelicalism's presence at the center of American culture and its passage in and out of the halls of power. --John G. Turner, author of Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet ...[An] informative and entertaining romp through the past half-century of American religious and political history. --Journal of Church and State