A timely meditation on the passing of the liberal age, and on the life and afterlives of its grandfather, Thomas Hobbes. <b>Composed with Gray’s characteristic erudition and taste for the ironies of intellectual history, <i>The New Leviathans</i> is a provocative delight</b>, even as the author’s premonitions about the world to come are thoroughly discomfiting.
- Sohrab Ahmari, New Statesman
Post-Scruton, John Gray is <b>Britain’s best philosopher </b>– and he knocks it out of the park with a book that details the unravelling of the Western order.
The Telegraph
Gray is conscientiously illusionless, scrupulously refusing to believe in any of the ideals and comforting dreams that humans use to protect themselves against reality. This, perhaps, explains his popularity with my own much-disillusioned generation ... Gray’s philosophy is the thread that joins my friends of disparate political inclinations.
- James Marriott, The Times
An elegy for western liberalism ... a bracing thinker.
- Stuart Jeffries, Daily Telegraph
<b>Gray is a voracious, indeed an omnivorous, reader and a vivid writer</b>, the essays are individually enjoyable and interesting ... crisp, critical analysis.
- Alan Ryan, Literary Review
<b>It confronts the truth that no politician dares utter</b>: that things are very bad with a world in which, in Gray’s words, either market forces are directed by the state or the state has been captured by corporate power.
- Terry Eagleton, Unherd
Author J. G. Ballard claimed that <i>Straw Dogs</i> challenges assumptions and exposes delusions. With his latest book, Gray continues to do both these things.
- Andy Owen, The Critic