“Rage and the Republic” Returns as New York Times Bestseller

I am delighted to announce that Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution,” is back on the New York Times Bestsellers list for nonfiction for the second time. I am profoundly grateful to everyone who has bought the book, including the audiobook. It is difficult to express what it means to have so many support the book, which was published to coincide with our 250th anniversary of the American Revolution.

You can read the book reviews here.

Upcoming book events include Monday, July 13, at Chautauqua, NY; Monday July 20, Yorba Linda, Cal., at the Nixon Presidential Library; Wednesday, July 22, Washington, D.C., at the Senate Intern Lecture Series;  Thursday, July 23, and Union League of New York. We also have later speaking events at the Ford Presidential Library and Carter Presidential Library.  

Here is the description and excerpt that appeared in the New York Post:

America’s revolutionaries: We’re our own greatest creations, as Tom Paine proved

In his new book, “Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution,” Professor Turley explores the meaning and future of democracy on the American Revolution’s 250th anniversary.

The first half looks back at the unique confluence of people and events that led to the establishment of the American republic.

The second half looks forward, exploring whether the American republic can survive in the 21st century in light of changes ranging from artificial intelligence to robotics to global governance systems.

Turley believes the American republic is uniquely suited to address those challenges, but it will require a return, not a rejection, of the core values that defined the American Revolution.

Excerpt:

“Like Saturn, the Revolution devours its children.” Those words from journalist Jacques Mallet du Pan during the French Revolution referred to the Roman God Saturn, or Kronos in Greek.

Kronos attempted to defy his mother’s prophesy that he would be overthrown by one of his children by them upon their births. When his son Zeus was born, Kronos’s consort Rhea decided to trick him by wrapping a stone in a swaddling blanket and handing it to him to devour. She then hid Zeus on Crete. Once he reached adulthood, Zeus returned and, fulfilling the prophesy, defeated his father.

The story of Kronos held obvious meaning for Mallet du Pan, who watched with alarm as the French Revolution devoured first its aristocratic foes and then its own supporters. It is a story played out over and over again in history as ambition becomes activism, activism becomes extremism, and extremism becomes authoritarianism. Call it the Saturn gene. We are all Saturn’s children with an inherent impulse that rests within each of us: the capacity of all mortals to become monsters.

The lesson of Saturn would also be raised in the American Revolution by none other than Thomas Paine. Long before Jefferson put pen to parchment on the Declaration of Independence, it was Paine who would speak of the natural and inalienable rights as the basis for the American Revolution. It was Paine, in his pamphlet Common Sense, who made the case for “independency.” It was also Paine who saw, firsthand, the ability of a revolution to consume itself.

Paine would play a significant role in two revolutions that took strikingly different paths in America and France. Among the best-known figures of the American Revolution, only the Marquis de Lafayette could make a similar claim.

Paine learned the dangers of unrestrained popular government in the hardest possible way. It came close to killing him in France. He would learn that what was lost in Paris was precisely what he had left in Philadelphia—a system that could channel tremendous political and economic pressures into a stable Republic.

We are again living in revolutionary times. It is not just classic revolutions where governments are overthrown, but rather revolutions that can change countries from within. We refer to the Industrial Revolution and the Information Revolution to signify the transformative changes that they brought to society. Often those new realities produce countervailing political changes in government. The twenty-first century has seen the acceleration of new technology like artificial intelligence (AI) that is reframing every aspect of human existence.

These changes will redefine not just the workplace but also the place of citizens in society at large. The question is whether American democracy can survive in the twenty-first century or collapse under the same forces of democratic despotism that brought down its contemporaries. It is the unfinished story of the American Revolution.

Thomas Paine saw this up close in Paris at the height of the French Revolution. He had been among those voices early on among the French Jacobins who cheered the stripping away constitutional protections to unleash the “general will.” The insatiable appetite of Saturn took hold of the liberators.

For Paine, the ultimate collapse of his ideals came in December 1793. He had just been stripped of his seat in the French National Convention in a vote of no confidence. In watching the executions in Paris, Paine lamented to a friend, “Ah France, thou hast ruined the character of a revolution virtuously begun, and destroyed those who produced it.”

The long-awaited knock at his bedroom door came on December 28, 1793. There stood five policemen and two representatives of the feared Committee on General Safety. When asked for the charge, they just shrugged. Such details were now largely meaningless in France.

It would not be democratic ideals but poor ventilation that would save Paine from joining his decapitated colleagues in Paris. After opening the door to allow more air into the cell, guards missed the chalk mark designating him and his cellmates for death. Paine would soon walk out of the Palais du Luxembourg as the Terror came to an end with the death of Robespierre.

Paine was an imperfect being, a man who often seemed intent to find his end at the bottom of a gallows or a bottle. It is a miracle that neither the Crown nor cirrhosis had not ended his life earlier. However, few could have shown his bravery and strength in pursuing “his principles unto death.” He remains today, as he was then, a figure easier to admire from a distance.

If American democracy is to survive in the twenty-first century, it must, again, break the Saturn cycle. The country—and the world—are facing profound economic and social changes.

The causes may be different in the form of robotics or AI, but challenge remains the same in maintaining political stability during a period of economic unrest with hard-stratified class divisions, subsistence income, and greater social separation. The answers may be found in what occurred 250 years ago and how revolutionary pressures were vented within a Madisonian system. We are witnessing the convergence of radical movements with ominous economic conditions developing in this century due to changes in technology and the workplace.

In the United States, the political divide has become deep and increasingly violent. At the same time, the country is facing what could be the most significant economic shifts since the Industrial Revolution with the increase in robotic manufacturing, AI, increased undocumented migration, and widening wealth stratification. After the last industrial revolution, social upheaval and displacement were followed by political instability. Yet the massive rise in production and wealth eventually brought prosperity to this and other nations. It is less clear that the new economic and technological advances will produce the same wealth infusion for the middle class, let alone the lower class.

We are already seeing the signs of political atrophy as influential figures join the call for sweeping constitutional and institutional changes in the United States. The assumption that the Constitution can, once again, weather this period of unrest and uncertainty is a dangerous conceit. The coming storm will test again a system that has lost key allies in politics and academia.

In the last ten years, we have seen radical voices on both the left and the right dismissing democratic traditions and safeguards to achieve immediate change. It seems, if “democracy is at stake,” even democratic norms can be sacrificed to save it. There are growing calls among academics to radically change our constitutional and political systems. In a New York Times column titled “The Constitution Is Broken and Should Not Be Reclaimed,” Harvard law professor Ryan D. Doerfler and Yale Law professor Samuel Moyn called for the Constitution to be “radically altered” to “reclaim America from Constitutionalism.” Georgetown University law professor Rosa Brooks warned the public not to become “slaves” to the U.S. Constitution if it stands in the way of real change. Berkeley Dean Erwin Chemerinsky is the author of a book titled No Democracy Lasts Forever: How the Constitution Threatens the United States.

In May 2024, I was working on this book when suddenly I felt pulled into the pages of my research. A mob outside was crying “Guillotine! Guillotine! Guillotine!” Those words were not chanted on Place de la Concorde in Paris but on the quad of George Washington University in Washington, D.C. I was literally working on the material from the French Revolution when it seemed like the French Revolution had come to me. Students were holding a mock trial of the university president, the provost, board of directors, and others over their refusal to yield to demands in an anti-Israel protest. Encamped for weeks in the yard next to my law school office, the students chanted “off with their heads” and “Off to the motherf*cking gallows with you.”

No one seriously expected the tumbrels to roll down Pennsylvania Avenue. The students were venting and mocking the administration. However, the faux trial induced a certain “what if” moment, considering whether we could ever actually devolve into such madness. It came at a time when protests are becoming more radicalized and at times violent. There was also a guillotine at the January 6th riot in Congress when a mob broke into the Capitol. On that terrible day, someone also erected a gallows for Vice President Michael Pence. After Trump was reelected, leftist protesters brought guillotines to Capitol Hill at the inauguration and during later protests.

It is not the first time that effigies or mock gallows have been used to convey rage in our history. We have survived every age of rage because of a constitutional system that was designed not for the good times but the bad times that come with democracy. Yet, despite having the most successful and stable constitutional system in history, there is still that moment. A fleeting doubt as to whether the system could survive the morning, survive the times we are living in, survive us.

Many voices today are mere echoes of the past, calling for direct democratic change and attacking constitutional limitations on the “general will.” They are a rising class of American Jacobins, budding bourgeois revolutionaries striking out at the status quo and constitutional values. A mob can be irresistible to a politician if it can be set upon one’s opponents. The problem is controlling the mob when today’s revolutionaries become tomorrow’s reactionaries.

They are part of a counter-constitutional movement that includes professors and politicians. Most of these figures are not calling for violence but rather fueling the rage and demanding fundamental change in our system of government. It is the same dangerous game, as shown by the French Jacobins who found themselves pursued by the very mob that they enabled and encouraged.

We will continue to yield to violence, greed, and madness when conditions produce rage rather than reason. Some of those conditions are growing in the twenty-first century. However, the true story of democracy is one of hope. It is a shared hope that bound many of the figures in this book in the promise of humanity to be something greater as a people than we are as individuals. For Paine and the French, it was realization of the “general will.” For James Madison and the framers, it was the liberty that would unleash a golden age. It is the hope of every immigrant who comes to these shores seeking a future of their own making. We are not bound by generations in a country but a type of ancestry of ideas founded in liberty.

We are bound by a faith that we have the capacity to be something greater. So, again, we ask the same question of a Frenchman in the Eighteenth Century, “What then is the American?”

The answer is found at the moment of creation, when a people was defined by “certain inalienable rights, among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” It is seen in an imperfect people of the insatiably curious, brash jar-openers who refuse to be denied new opportunities. We are bound by the revolutionary idea that government exists to allow every citizen to pursue one’s own manifest destiny. As shown by Paine, we are our own greatest creations. What was true in 1776 is true today: These are revolutionary times, but we remain a revolutionary people.

34 thoughts on ““Rage and the Republic” Returns as New York Times Bestseller”

  1. Fantastic News, Prof. Turley…!!! Congrats and Prayers for this Book, a true Gift to the USA, to become one of the ALL-TIME BEST SELLERS EVER- ASAP…

  2. I wrote yet another comment criticizing Turley that didn’t make it past the censors. Let’s see if this one does. The points were: all “bestseller” means is that more copies of the book were ordered than other books for a circumscribed period of time–which is not very long. “Bestseller” does NOT mean that there is any quality to the item–and, “bestseller” status can be manipulated–Joe Kennedy did it with JFK’s first book, so some pro-MAGA group could have ordered a bunch of copies to boost Turley’s status as a “bestelling author”. Given Turley’s writings since he went MAGA, I have no interest in reading anything he writes because it is biased.

    1. I was unable to get specific numbers for how many copies of Turley’s book have been sold because the publisher won’t say. However, “Regime Change”, by Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan has sold well over 300,000 copies and it’s already in its second printing, even though it has only been available for a few weeks. “Regime Change” is the fastest selling non fiction book right now.

    2. “. . . I have no interest in reading anything [JT] writes . . .”

      That’s a good example of the new, fascist Left vs the previous generation democrats.

      The old D’s believed in understanding the opposition, and engaging the opposition with debate, arguments, reason.

      The neo-fascists, incapable of understanding and reasoning, simply erase the opposition.

  3. Fabulous book on par with Alexis de Tocqueville’s “Democracy in America.” A must-read for the intellectually curious…and honest. Well done, Prof. Turley. I listened to the Audible (set just a wee bit faster) and loved walking the vineyards, listening to the good professor’s sage commentary. Wish it was translated into Italian, German and French so I can give it to all my European friends and family!

  4. How.
    Many.
    Copies.
    Sold?

    Many convey their rage by waving Trump flags, rolling coal on electric vehicles, putting fake bandages on their ears, wearing masks to hide their identities after complaining that wearing masks would interfere with their ability to breathe.

    They rage because the upward movement that the US saw in the 1950s to the 1980s came to a halt and is now slipping backwards. They rage because a college degree no longer guarantees a job, but can guarantee a lifetime of unending debt. They rage because they can no longer buy a house at the age of 25, have 3 children before age 30, and put them through college before they are 55.

    They are told it is poor people who are doing this to them. That immigrants have stolen their American Dream. That transexuals are ruining sports and raping every girl in every locker room and bathroom in America 24 hours each and every day. They are told that undocumented immigrants are stealing the Social Security benefits that the US Congress itself has plundered.

    They are told this by millionaires hired by billionaires to convince the middle and lower class to be minions to the oligarchs who have bought so much of the legislatures, significant parts of the Federal court system, and currently own the Presidency.

    They are told to focus their rage on those of the other party, but only the Republicans and conservatives are taking that message to heart because they are the ones who believe it’s the poor, the immigrants, or the transsexuals who have stolen their American dream, while the billionaires are stealing their futures.

  5. Professor Turley ‘forgot’ to mention a distinction between the Democrats and Republicans when it comes to sexual assault/rape allegations.

    Democrats gave Platner the benefit of the doubt first, then when the allegations became more serious the Democrats as a whole demanded Platner exit from his run and the party refused to support him. It’s something Republicans rarely do.

    Contrast this with Donald Trump, who was found liable for sexual abuse and defamation, and corruption yet remains the undisputed leader of the GOP. Jim Jordan was protected and elevated to powerful committee chairs despite allegations of ignoring sexual abuse at Ohio State University. Matt Gaetz having sexual relations with minors. Republicans barely peeped outrage or demanded he resign immediately. Not when their Majority could be threatened.

    Turley treats Democratic scandals as systemic moral rot, while treating Republican scandals as minor inconveniences.

    Turley calling Platner’s exit a “moral failure” for Democrats is laughable. Democrats forced their nominee out within days of an assault allegation. Republicans made a convicted sexual abuser the face of their entire party. The only “Faustian bargain” here is Turley pretending the GOP has any moral high ground left to stand on.

  6. Yes, actually, I have. Finished it a few months back. Currently on the shelf next to “Look Homeward Angel” and “You Can’t Go Home Again” (both by Thomas Wolfe).

    Does that bother you?

  7. High praise indeed, and published just in February 2026 at 448 pages with >350 Amazon reviews. Impressive. Congrats Professor Turley. The reviews by some of my favorite legal scholars like Jed Rubenfeld and Robert P. George are a nice hat tip. Laurence Tribe and your lesser academic legal peers may now, if they have not already, construct a gallows for you (or for themselves)

    The best revenge is success.

    Editorial Reviews
    Review
    “A masterpiece… a moving account on the very essence of liberty that should be on the shelf of every American.” — Mark Levin, host of Life, Liberty & Levin and #1 New York Times bestselling author

    “A fluent take on history and politics from a thoughtful contrarian.” ― Kirkus Reviews

    “Turley demonstrates a discomforting, and painfully timely, truth: The phrase “democratic despotism” is not an oxymoron.” — George F. Will, Pulitzer Prize winner and Washington Post columnist

    “Rage and the Republic is Jonathan Turley’s birthday gift to America to mark its 250 years of independence… A wise guide to avoid wrecking the American project.” — Uri Berliner, contributing editor, Free Press and former senior business editor at National Public Radio

    “A fascinating and inspiring account of the foundations of the American system…a must-read.” — Nadine Strossen, former president of the American Civil Liberties Union

    “[A] scholarly tour de force that could not be more timely.” — Charles Lane, author of The Day Freedom Died and nonresident senior fellow, the American Enterprise Institute

    “Brilliant and riveting. The American Revolution comes alive, and so does the birth of the Constitution.” — Jed Rubenfeld, Yale Law Professor, author, and constitutional law expert

    “[A] valuable contribution to American civic life.” — Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and Director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions

    “An enjoyable book to read, one taken forward with great conviction and one that, crucially, encourages you to think.” — Jeremy Black, former Professor of History at the University of Exeter and a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of America and the West ― National Review

    “Those dueling impulses, rage and reason, are the focus of “Rage and the Republic”… The question of democratic rage is timeless, and Mr. Turley’s historical narrative is sweeping—from the trial of Socrates to the rhetoric of Huey Long.” — Adam J. White ― Wall Street Journal

    In a study by Judge Richard Posner, Turley was found to be thirty-eighth in the top 100 most cited “public intellectuals” (and the second most cited law professor).

    Product details
    Publisher ‏ : ‎ Simon & Schuster
    Publication date ‏ : ‎ February 3, 2026
    Language ‏ : ‎ English
    Print length ‏ : ‎ 448 pages
    ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1668205025
    ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1668205020

    https://www.amazon.com/Rage-Republic-Unfinished-American-Revolution/dp/1668205025/ref=sr_1_1

    1. “Laurence Tribe is a lesser academic peer”? Are you joking or just uninformed? Or, is this just another MAGA effort to try to boost Turley’s credibility since he turned MAGA?

      Professor Tribe taught SCOTUS Justices Roberts and Kagan. He also taught Barak Obama, Ted Cruz and Merrick Garland. He is the author of the authoritative law text “American Constitutional Law”, and he argued 36 cases before the Supreme Court. He taught Constitutional Law at Harvard University for 50 years.

      Turley’s credentials are not even remotely comparable. Why do you MAGAS have to exaggerate everything?

  8. I read it in time for the 4th celebrations. I also read his previous book on free speech. The author belongs on the Supreme Court and if there is a vacancy during a Trump or Vance or Rubio administration, I will go into action on behalf of Professor Turley..

      1. I’m pleased that triggered you.

        I read it 20 years ago as I began my US civics study. It only checked a box as I wasn’t yet prepared to appreciate the underlying principles presented.

        No doubt your ignorant ass will never understand that.

    1. Olly, consider reading Edmund Burke’s Reflections…. on the French Revolution. He and Thomas Paine had different opinions. on that war. This short treatise is more agreeable to us than what Paine was saying at the time. Paine wrote a book right afterward, and it may be the response to Burke. I don’t remember.

      1. What’s your opinion on the US war against “The Islamic Republic of Japan” that Trump referred to at the NATO summit? I didn’t know that there is an “Islamic Republic of Japan”, much less that we were at war with them.

        I ask this question because if Joe Biden had said something that off the wall, MAGA and Republicans would be demanding that he resign. Instead we get crickets.

        1. One has to ask oneself what your statement has to do with Paine or Burke? What we see is such a TDS reaction, forcing an individual to utter complete nonsense

          Enjoy your flight… of ideas, that is.

  9. Congratulations, Professor! I am certainly enjoying it. Thank you all for all you do.

  10. Anonymous 7:02 AM
    Yes, and obviously quite a few others. Correcting your syntax. The Question should be “Has anybody bothered to buy it or read it?” The answer is still yes. You should wake up before you start typing.

    1. Obviously huh? Where are the “obviously’s” here GEB? Only two commenters here admit it. Try walking up before typing.

  11. Congratulations, Dr. Turley! God’s work in you is blessing countless numbers. Thank you for your faithfulness!

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