Katharine Dunn,
The Oregonian, December 2, 2007
Those of us who imagine economists to be mild souls preoccupied with tedious abstractions are in for a shock from
The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, Naomi Klein's stunning, polemic re-examination of the last 30-plus years in the history of free-market capitalism. If we bought the myth of corporate globalization as a benign and bloodless process, Klein has more jolts in store.
The Canadian Klein is a columnist for
The Nation and
The Guardian and a former fellow at the London School of Economics. Her work on this, her third book, began in 2004, when she spent time in Iraq reporting on the reconstruction process for
Harper's magazine. Her research is massive, meticulously documented and laid out in fluid, accessible and intriguing stories.