In this essay collection, British writer Dalrymple (Life at the Bottom
) lays out a case for the decline of Western civilization, finding its symptoms lurking in everything from multiculturalism to the “delusions of honesty” by political leaders. Although less of a lovable curmudgeon than plain ferocious in his ire, the author's forays into literary criticism are appealing if amateurish; a former prison doctor, the author is most cogent when on his own beat, analyzing the criminal justice and medical systems. Predictably pessimistic on the political front, the author has sharp words for his fellow Brits (“They are educated by the state, the state provides for them in old age and has made saving unnecessary or, in some cases, actually uneconomic; they are treated and cured by the state... they are housed by the state.... Their choices concern only sex and shopping”). He saves his worst condemnation for Muslims: (“[Muslim men] satisfy their sexual needs with prostitutes and those whom they quite openly call 'white sluts' ”); his pieces on terrorism and suicide bombers abound with ugly stereotyping from which this otherwise entertaining book never fully recovers. (Oct.)