

The Glenn Show
Glenn Loury
Race, inequality, and economics in the US and throughout the world from Glenn Loury. glennloury.substack.com
Top mentioned books
Here are the most frequently recommended books on The Glenn Show:

#1 Mentioned in 10 episodes
Late Admissions
#2 Mentioned in 6 episodes
Self-Censorship

#3 Mentioned in 5 episodes
The Message

#4 Mentioned in 3 episodes
The Two-Parent Privilege

#5 Mentioned in 3 episodes
Knowledge and Decisions

#6 Mentioned in 3 episodes
A conflict of visions

#7 Mentioned in 3 episodes
Maverick!
The Success Story Behind the World's Most Unusual Workplace

#8 Mentioned in 3 episodes
Between the World and Me

#9 Mentioned in 3 episodes
Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza: A Reckoning

#10 Mentioned in 2 episodes
America in Black and White: One Nation, Indivisible

#11 Mentioned in 2 episodes
Hillbilly Elegy
A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis

#12 Mentioned in 2 episodes
Racecraft: The Soul of Inequality in American Life

#13 Mentioned in 2 episodes
The Bell Curve

#14 Mentioned in 2 episodes
The Coddling of the American Mind

#15 Mentioned in 2 episodes
The condemnation of blackness

#16 Mentioned in 2 episodes
James

#17 Mentioned in 2 episodes
On liberty

#18 Mentioned in 2 episodes
The End of Race Politics: Arguments for a Colorblind America

#19 Mentioned in 2 episodes
The Tyranny of Merit
What's Become of the Common Good?
#20 Mentioned in 2 episodes
Late Admissions, Confessions of a Black Conservative
The Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, ended its relationship with noted Brown University economist Glenn Loury after he was critical of Israel's actions in Gaza. The cancelation followed an appearance from fellow Brown professor and Israeli historian Omar Bartov on his podcast, during which Bartov offered an analysis of the Gaza genocide that reflected international consensus on Israeli violations of international law. Professor Loury joins Briahna Joy Gray for a must-watch two hour discussion in which Loury reflects on his career as a Black conservative, Ta-Nehesi Coates' book The Message, and the fact that his own Blackness informs his sympathetic attitude toward the Palestinian people. Does identity matter after all? As conservatives attempt to strip funding from the National African American History Museum and obstruct educators from teaching diverse histories, does Loury have any regrets about supporting attacks on "woke" pedagogy? Also, Loury debriefs on his viral interview with Tucker Carlson, and how his lefty wife has helped him to become more establishment in recent years.