EBOOK

About
She heard reasonable people in Britain say it the night of the Brexit vote. She heard reasonable people in Turkey say it as Erdoğan rigged elections, rebuilt the economy around cronyism, and labelled his opposition as terrorists. How to Lose a Country is an impassioned plea, a warning to the world that populism and nationalism don't march fully-formed into government; they creep. Award winning author and journalist Ece Temelkuran, identifies the early-warning signs of this phenomenon, sprouting up across the world from Eastern Europe to South America, in order to define a global pattern, and arm the reader with the tools to root it out. Proposing alternative, global answers to the pressing, and too often paralyzing, political questions of our time, Temelkuran explores the insidious idea of 'real people', the infantilisation of language and debate, the way laughter can prove a false friend, and the dangers of underestimating one's opponent. She weaves memoir, history and clear-sighted argument into an urgent and eloquent defense of democracy. No longer can the reasonable comfort themselves with 'it couldn't happen here.' It is happening. And soon it may be too late. • ESTABLISHED PLATFORM: Ece has already established herself as a respected political commentator. In the past few years she has been profiled in n+1, and written for the Guardian, the New York Times, the New Statesman, Frankfurter Allgemeine and Der Spiegel. She has also built her own platform, garnering almost 3 million Twitter followers. • INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER: Ece is an international publishing powerhouse. Her fiction, non-fiction and poetry have been published into more than ten languages. Her most recent novel Women Who Blow on Knots, sold more than 120,000 copies in Turkey, and won the Edinburgh International Festival's First Book Award. • A PRESSING ISSUE: Depressingly, this book only seems to get more timely as the months role on. It's perfect for readers of books like Talking to my Daughter About the Economy by Yannis Varoufakis (40K TCM) and WTF by Robert Peston (30K TCM); books that contextualize the problems of the political landscape, and seek to offer new answers to the reader's most pressing questions.