Investigative reporter Jean Guerrero deftly uncovers how Stephen Miller—as a privileged California teenager desperate for attention and power—immersed himself in right-wing dark arts, attracting a motley crew of white supremacists and extremists eager to cultivate the precocious boy's interests. Under their tutelage, Miller developed a talent for twisting progressive rhetoric to his will—a skill the Trump administration has used to shape its most sadistic policies. Hatemonger is a must-read for those who want to understand how small minds steeped in extremist methods have amassed great power in the 21st century. A superbly reported and haunting American tragedy.” — Rachel Slade, author of the national bestseller Into the Raging Sea
“In Hatemonger, Jean Guerrero doesn’t just catalogue Stephen Miller’s scorched-earth campaign to relentlessly vilify and abuse migrants from the nucleus of American politics—she also shines a light on the casual radicalization of a life-long troll and his gleeful ascendance to the halls of power, revealing the insidious inner workings of modern-day white supremacy. A vital book for understanding the still-unfolding nightmare of nationalism and racism in the 21st century.” — Francisco Cantu, author of The Line Becomes a River
“An urgent story. Jean Guerrero writes with piercing clarity about one of the most powerful and elusive figures in America today.” — Wil S. Hylton, author of Vanished
“An unsparing portrait of the young architect of Trumpian nationalism…carefully documented and persuasive. A readable study in the banality of evil, even if it comes clothed in bespoke suits.” — Kirkus Reviews
“A fascinating analysis of Miller and his frightening effects on immigration policy, which is enriched by the author’s vast experience reporting on the U.S.-Mexico border.” — Library Journal
"A brilliant and necessary look into the making of the mastermind behind the worst of America's policies. Guerrero's deep dive into Stephen Miller was enlightening and terrifying all at once. Hatemonger is required reading to understand what we are truly up against in America." — Julissa Arce, bestselling author of My (Underground) American Dream and Someone Like Me
"Superb, deeply revelatory." — Vanity Fair
"Incisive and terrifying." — Jezebel
"Jean Guerrero’s meticulously-researched biography of Stephen Miller, is a horrifying page-turner. Understanding who Miller is, and what motivates him, is key to understanding the racial politics that threaten the lives and safety of racially minoritized people living in the United States today." — Myriam Gurba, Remezcla
"In her new book, Hatemonger, journalist Jean Guerrero provides a full portrait of this Nosferatu of the West Wing....The title 'Hatemonger' might seem sensational or overdramatic, but it is clinically precise. Miller acquires, packages, commercializes, and touts hatred as surely as a fishmonger peddles haddock and cod. Jean Guerrero has the emails." — The Bulwark
“[Hatemonger] is the secret history of how White Nationalism got into the White House.” — The Majority Report
"Smartly reported and urgent." — Jeff Sharlet, Bookforum
"Incisive and terrifying."
"Superb, deeply revelatory."
05/18/2020
Journalist Guerrero (Crux: A Cross-Border Memoir) underwhelms in this outraged biography of the Trump administration senior policy adviser Stephen Miller. Reconstructing Miller’s upbringing in a politically conservative Jewish family in Santa Monica, Calif., in the 1990s (when the state was riven by starkly different approaches to illegal immigration), Guerrero spotlights Miller’s early interest in right-wing radio, middle-school subscription to Guns & Ammo, and opposition to bilingual education, multiculturalism, and a gay student club at Santa Monica High School. At Duke University, Miller gained national prominence for a series of student newspaper columns about a group of white lacrosse students wrongfully accused of raping a black woman. After graduation, Miller worked on the staffs of Minnesota congresswoman Michelle Bachmann and Alabama senator Jeff Sessions before joining the Trump administration, where he led the charge to ban immigration from predominantly Muslim countries and to separate migrant children from their parents at the U.S.–Mexico border. The inner workings of Trump’s anti-immigration policies have been covered in more depth elsewhere, and Guerrero’s research into Miller’s family background (his great-grandparents immigrated to America to escape Russian pogroms) reveal many ironies but few deep insights. Readers will be left in the dark about what makes Miller tick. (Aug.)
Investigative reporter Jean Guerrero deftly uncovers how Stephen Miller—as a privileged California teenager desperate for attention and power—immersed himself in right-wing dark arts, attracting a motley crew of white supremacists and extremists eager to cultivate the precocious boy's interests. Under their tutelage, Miller developed a talent for twisting progressive rhetoric to his will—a skill the Trump administration has used to shape its most sadistic policies. Hatemonger is a must-read for those who want to understand how small minds steeped in extremist methods have amassed great power in the 21st century. A superbly reported and haunting American tragedy.
In Hatemonger, Jean Guerrero doesn’t just catalogue Stephen Miller’s scorched-earth campaign to relentlessly vilify and abuse migrants from the nucleus of American politics—she also shines a light on the casual radicalization of a life-long troll and his gleeful ascendance to the halls of power, revealing the insidious inner workings of modern-day white supremacy. A vital book for understanding the still-unfolding nightmare of nationalism and racism in the 21st century.
An urgent story. Jean Guerrero writes with piercing clarity about one of the most powerful and elusive figures in America today.
"A brilliant and necessary look into the making of the mastermind behind the worst of America's policies. Guerrero's deep dive into Stephen Miller was enlightening and terrifying all at once. Hatemonger is required reading to understand what we are truly up against in America."
"Jean Guerrero’s meticulously-researched biography of Stephen Miller, is a horrifying page-turner. Understanding who Miller is, and what motivates him, is key to understanding the racial politics that threaten the lives and safety of racially minoritized people living in the United States today."
"In her new book, Hatemonger, journalist Jean Guerrero provides a full portrait of this Nosferatu of the West Wing....The title 'Hatemonger' might seem sensational or overdramatic, but it is clinically precise. Miller acquires, packages, commercializes, and touts hatred as surely as a fishmonger peddles haddock and cod. Jean Guerrero has the emails."
"Smartly reported and urgent."
[Hatemonger] is the secret history of how White Nationalism got into the White House.
04/10/2020
Guerrero (Crux: A Cross-Border Memoir) profiles Steven Miller, the Trump administration's immigration policy advisor and architect of the infamous family separation policy which barred immigrants and refugees from entering the United States. The author describes events throughout Miller's life, showing how exposure to right-wing media, economic uncertainty, family strife, and the evolving political climate of California and the United States contributed to his antiimmigrant views. Miller gained notoriety as the spokesperson for then-Senator Jeff Sessions and eventually joined the Trump administration as an influential advisor. The bulk of Guerrero's analysis focuses on Miller's immigration policies during the Trump years, with special attention to the border between the U.S. and Mexico. Guerrero argues that the effects of Miller's policies are widespread, and she includes heartbreaking stories of migrants to illustrate her point. Additionally, she shows how his policies have emboldened white supremacists and inspired acts of domestic terrorism. VERDICT A fascinating analysis of Miller and his frightening effects on immigration policy, which is enriched by the author's vast experience reporting on the U.S.-Mexico border. Recommended for readers interested in politics and immigration.—Rebekah Kati, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
2020-03-29
An unsparing portrait of the young architect of Trumpian nationalism.
“Stephen’s rhetoric has completely infected the tone and mantra of this administration,” says a former high school classmate of Donald Trump’s chief henchman. “It’s his.” That rhetoric, writes California-based journalist Guerrero, centers on multiculturalism, which Stephen Miller, descended from Jewish immigrants from pre-Holocaust Eastern Europe, rejects in favor of white nationalism. The author charts the ambitious Miller’s rise, claiming that, at one point, he aspired to be a U.S. senator. Fresh out of college, he started working as an assistant to tea party darling Michelle Bachmann, moved on to work with a right-wing Arizona congressman, and then snagged a job with Alabama senator and erstwhile Trump attorney general Jeff Sessions, “an elfin nativist with white hair.” He eventually jumped into the White House, promoted by Steve Bannon, having been nurtured by right-wing entrepreneur David Horowitz, and forged connections with a broad range of nationalist allies, including white supremacists and neo-Nazis. By Guerrero’s account, Miller is the principal author of the administration’s immigration policy, with its tent-city prisons and separation of infants from parents. The “demonization of migrants” as criminals and people who, as Trump once said, “would never go back to their huts,” is an essential tool to keep a nationalist base galvanized and ready to fight. Trump didn’t need Miller to teach him the art of hatemongering, Guerrero writes, but all the same, Miller’s “fanatical ideology, work ethic and strategic thinking” have furthered the aims of a president bent on destroying existing norms. Guerrero sometimes shades off into idle speculation, as when she connects Miller’s California origins to Hollywood make-believe, but her account of his unsentimental education by way of racist texts, a carefully cultivated hatred for the nonwhite world, and a core group of mentors is carefully documented and persuasive.
A readable study in the banality of evil, even if it comes clothed in bespoke suits.