‘Utterly brilliant and chilling – no matter how much you think you already know … Read it!’
‘Utterly brilliant and chilling – no matter how much you think you already know … Read it!’
‘Political journalism at its best, an epic and terrifying story that grips the reader like a Stephen King thriller.’
‘Indispensable.’
‘Persuasive, timely and necessary.’
‘A terrifying insight into how 21st-century politics works.’
‘A triumph … Mayer has cut through the secrecy that these men have carefully cultivated … and given the world a full accounting of what had been a shadowy and largely unseen force.’
‘Packed with revelations.’
‘A must-read for those seeking to understand how Washington became a corporatocracy.’
‘Meticulously researched and elegantly written.’
NPR’s ‘Best Books of 2016’
‘Meticulously, fascinatingly and horrifyingly explains how eccentric American billionaires hijaced our democracy.’
‘Deeply researched and studded with detail … Seems destined to rattle the Koch executive offices in Wichita as other investigations have not.’
‘With such turmoil on the right wing of American politics, reading Dark Money is like reading the first chapter of what may be a great political page-turner.’
‘Jane Mayer … is, quite simply, one of the very few utterly invaluable journalists this country has.’
‘Dark Money is almost too good for its own good … [t]he story is so outrageous it should make any citizen want to go out and do something about it.’
‘[A] comprehensive history … Stunning.’
‘Mayer is … a writer whose reporting can leave a reader breathless … I urge you to read Dark Money.’
‘[A]n extraordinarily well-documented account of the influential, interlocking organisations with innocuous names created by the Koch brothers.’
‘The importance of Dark Money does not flow from any explosive new revelation, but from its scope and perspective … It is not easy to uncover the inner workings of an essentially secretive political establishment. Mayer has come as close to doing it as anyone is likely to come anytime soon.’
‘Dark Money piles up facts and anecdotes to support its central thesis: the evasion by the very rich of any obligation to rise above self-interest and serve the public interest … The billionaires do all the mischief they can, and Jane Mayer, in this brave and resourceful book, has numbered their abuses with admirable pertinacity.’
‘Mayer is one of the nation’s best investigative journalists, and she is writing in the muckraking tradition of Ida Tarbell. Readers who believe that money and politics make for a toxic brew will share Mayer’s anger, which animates every page of Dark Money.’