The Manifesto of the Revolution!
I can't wait to read it and hope you all purchase the book too.
But, alas, the "libertarian" magazine Reason is not celebrating.
[In addition, I bought Prejudices: A Philosophical Dictionary by Robert Nisbet and The Commercial Society: Foundations and Challenges in a Global Age
by Samuel Gregg. Both of these books I'm looking forward to as well.
The late Robert Nisbet is one of my favorite conservative
intellectuals. As Mr. Daniel McCarthy, an editor of The American Conservative,
has said, while Nisbet never called himself a libertarian, nonetheless,
the implications of his work is highly libertarian, be it a kind of (and, I believe, rightfully so) "anti-atomistic-individualistic" libertarianism. Just read, for example, Twilight of Authority
to see what I mean. His work has had a great impact on my thinking
about a free society and what that means.]