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In the '60s it was the Boomers. In the '90s, it was the Xers. Now, it's the Millennials—who are graduating from high school and flooding the nation's college campuses. In Millennials Rising: The Next Great Generation, bestselling authors Howe and Strauss reveal who these kids are and where they're going.
They explain:
- Why Millennials are protected, pressures, and celebrated far more than Boomers or Gen Xers ever were
- Why civic spirit and test scores are up, and crime and risky behavior are down
- Why today's kids are held to higher standards than adults apply to themselves
- Why Millennials are a lot less violent, vulgar, and sexually charged than the teen culture older people are producing for them
A decade ago, in Generations, Howe and Strauss predicted many of the youth trends we are beginning to see today. Now, in this remarkable new book—one that is certain to spark a heated national debate about the next generation—the authors provide startling proof for how today's Millennial teens are defying conventional wisdom about youth.
Having taken their own polls, weighed all the data, talked with hundreds of kids, parents, and teachers, and reflected on the rhythms of history, Howe and Strauss offer this powerful conclusion: Before the decade is over, Millennials will reject the Gen X pop culture, rebel against Boomer politics, dramatically redefine what it means to be young, and, in time, become America's next great generation. |
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Biography
- Neil Howe is a senior advisor to the Concord Coalition and senior policy advisor to the Blackstone Group. With graduate degrees from Yale in history and economics, he was a journalist, magazine editor, and foundation policy executive while playing a growing role in the national debate over entitlement reform. He coauthored On Borrowing Time, about the impact of aging on fiscal policy, and coedits the Concord Coalition's Facing Facts newsletter. Neil lives with his family in Fairfax County, Virginia.
- William Strauss is the cofounder and director of the Capital Steps, a political cabaret. An alumnus of Harvard Law and Kennedy Schools, he was a policy director for the U.S. Congress and coauthored two books on the Vietnam draft (including Chance and Circumstance) before shifting his focus to the performing arts. He has recently written two musical on teen themes (MaKiddo and StopScandal.Com) and has founded the Cappies, America's largest theater awards program for high school students. William lives with his family in Fairfax County, Virginia.
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