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The MAGA Diaries

My Surreal Journey into the Heart of the Alt-Right and How I Got Out

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
This explosive "must-read for anyone who cares about the future of our democracy" (Brian Stelter, New York Times bestselling author) chronicles the rise of the MAGA movement from acclaimed political journalist Tina Nguyen, who began her career—and her education—on the ground levels of the conservative recruiting machine.
Her very first job was working for a little-known journalist named Tucker Carlson. She's chugged Mountain Dews with the first Breitbart writers, poured over conspiracy theories from COVID-19 deniers, and visited the apocalyptic Patriot Church deep in the woods of the Pacific Northwest. The right is now a MAGA cult. And Tina Nguyen knows because she was raised by it, back when it wasn't one.

In 2008, in the weeks leading up to the election of Barack Obama, Nguyen was a history-loving, politics-obsessed college student at Claremont McKenna College, drawn there by a boyfriend—and a research institute called the Salvatori Center for the Study of Individual Freedom. Swept up by pro-America rhetoric and promises of a career in journalism, Nguyen was drawn into the world of right-wing student activism, and the early days of the movement now known as MAGA.

In The MAGA Diaries, she tells not only her story of loving and leaving the conservative movement but the history of the right wing, painting a shocking picture of how they recruit, train, and indoctrinate generations of young people and shape them into the influential leaders and the supporting cast of tomorrow's Republican party. They are ruthless in building robust networks of power, even if it means demolishing entire civic institutions, from women's rights to fair elections—and staging a coup when it doesn't work out.

In this "sobering, endlessly readable fly-on-the-wall account of creeping fascism" (Kirkus Reviews, starred review), Nguyen pulls back the curtain on the conservative machine, shining a light on the systematized on-ramp for young Republicans. These are the new leaders of the right, and it's urgent we start paying attention.
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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2023

      Currently a national correspondent for Puck, Nguyen was a right-wing activist at Claremont McKenna College in 2008-12 and was consequently there at the creation and initial surge of the MAGA movement. She got out, as her subtitle states, and here draws on that early access to explain how the alt-right recruits and indoctrinates believers, building networks meant to bend the nation to its will. Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 27, 2023
      A journalist revisits her youthful dalliance with and later disaffection from the conservative movement in this entertaining and insightful debut. Puck correspondent Nguyen recounts her infatuation with conventional conservatism—she loved constitutional history and revered the founding fathers—at California’s Claremont McKenna College, where she hooked into a web of internships and mentors including John Elliott at George Mason University’s Institute for Humane Studies, who helped her land a stint at the Daily Caller. (She paints its founding editor Tucker Carlson as a nice man fond of antics like fly-casting in the newsroom.) But she came to realize that many conservative publications were disguised PR outfits bankrolled by right-wing foundations that pressured her and others to slant their reporting. Drifting away from conservatism after 2013, she started writing about politics at Vanity Fair, often reporting on right-wing figures; her distance from the movement increased after news broke that Elliott belonged to a secret circle of journalists who tried to infuse white-nationalist themes into mainstream conservative media. Nguyen cannily depicts conservatives as models of organizational strength, patiently growing their numbers through mentoring and career-building programs. Meanwhile, progressives she encounters are hampered in their efforts to foster new talent by donors who seek “instant gratification.” The result is a spirited take on America’s political operative class.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from December 1, 2023
      Adventures inside the rabbit hole of right-wing extremism. Raised in "borderline poverty" by an "oblivious immigrant tiger mom," Nguyen fell under the spell of libertarianism early on. In prep school on a scholarship, she became involved with a young man who went on to become "Peter Thiel's hatchet man, introducing the billionaire to white supremacists." White supremacists were a dime a dozen in the orbits in which Nguyen would travel following college, moving from think tank to foundation to fellowship before finally landing as a journalist, at first writing from the right and then, following an apotheosis that makes for excellent reading, covering the right for the much-hated mainstream media. Among the players in her book are Tucker Carlson, a former boss when he, too, was a genuine journalist, and David Frum, one of whose articles, he told the author, was "my suicide note to the GOP." Following her disenchantment with "Conservatism Inc.," Nguyen writes, "the easiest thing to do was become nihilistic about the ideology." Instead, she dug in deep after trying to avoid the politics beat--lured back in by the emergence of Trump, for whom she has little affection. (That former boyfriend? He was not only an insider but also a leading Holocaust denier.) Nguyen's episodic anecdotes--they're not quite a diary, so the title is a touch misplaced--are fascinating, including the process of Carlson's becoming ensorcelled by the world of Trumpian power politics while not actually seeming to believe much of it or much of anything, as well as a passing story about a former mentor who had developed a not-so-secret code to "disguise ethnic slurs and pro-Hitler slogans." The bad news? In their relentless quest to reshape American society brick by brick, the rightists "are winning." A sobering, endlessly readable fly-on-the-wall account of creeping fascism.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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