Going Popular
Her recent book, Ambitious Brew: The Story of American Beer, was chosen by Hustler Magazine's book of the month club. She takes that as a starting point for a passionate denouncement of academic histories and historians and for making a case for 'public' histories.
In her view 'the disconnect between the history profession and “the people” runs deep and wide". Academic histories are"dense, footnoted books" that focus on"narrow-bordering-on-arcane topics" which are published in"scholarly journals and academic presses" and read by"a handful of people on the Upper West Side of Manhattan". At the other end of this divide are the people who"had no knowledge of the past" as they were raised on"music videos and sitcoms" and were, in fact,"unaware of the difference between a local public library and the one found at a university, or for that matter between a library and Google."
Like I said, I agree with her underlying point that we should be writing accessible histories for the general public, but her descriptions of what actually constitutes historians, their interests, their histories, or even 'the people' is just grossly caricatured and factually wrong.
Regardless, her call for popular histories should be well-heeded.