Adrian Wooldridge is the global business columnist at Bloomberg Opinion. Previously, he worked for the Economist for thirty-two years, including stints as its Lexington, Schumpeter and Bagehot columnist. He earned a doctorate in history from Oxford University, where he was a Fellow of All Souls College. He is the author or co-author of 11 other books, including The Aristocracy of Talent- How Meritocracy made the Modern World (2021).
Powerful and persuasive ... [Wooldridge has] a vivid way of telling the story of an idea through attacks from outside and betrayals from within .... neatly leads to an account of liberalism’s current retreat and what needs to be done now to revive it -- David Willetts * Financial Times * Ambitious ... Wooldridge [is] the Bagehot of our day. His narrative is persuasive, his diagnosis of the malaise of the Western elites is fresh and he offers convincing reasons for believing that “the lost genius of liberalism” will make a comeback. ... [He] wants to rid liberals of their taste for extremism, to persuade them to take populism seriously and take the fight to the autocrats. He denies that liberalism is shallow or banal, as its critics from Carlyle to Houellebecq have scoffed. He has done an outstanding job of making a fresh, compelling case for liberalism -- Daniel Johnson * Critic * Wooldridge ... is what you might call a muscular Whig, someone who believes in the idea of progress and liberal democracy as our best shot at human flourishing -- Josh Glancy * Sunday Times * In Centrists of the World Unite, Adrian Wooldridge carefully locates a crisis both within and without liberalism. [His] approach is refreshing ... [the book is] entertaining, eerie, and [provides] a piercing look at where societies and economies find themselves — which is, ultimately, quite a mess. There is no doubt that liberalism has found itself at a crossroads ... this [book] enables us to think about how it can recover -- Samuel Mace * Critic * A fine book ... stretches an essential truth over an impressive intellectual range -- Philip Collins * Observer * For a one-volume history of a rich and complicated subject, you can’t do better -- Jonathan Rauch * Unpopulist * One of the most vividly thoughtful liberals of our time -- Michael Morris * BusinessDay * Mr. Wooldridge gives us a bravura performance of summary and synthesis in his telling of the history and substance of liberalism -- Tunku Varadarajan * Wall Street Journal *