What happened to millennials? In defense of a generation

Charlie Wells

Book - 2025

What happened to millennials? At the birth of America's largest living generation, the outlook was strong: unparalleled economic growth, the emerging Internet, the rise of the cell phone, and a geopolitics that had allegedly reached "the end of history" all set expectations exceedingly high for a cohort entering adulthood at the dawn of the new millennium. That adulthood -- a work in progress for more than a quarter century -- has been disrupted by war, recession, pandemic, and a sharp turn toward cultural and economic polarization. It has also been endlessly critiqued by others as immature, lazy, weak, incomplete, selfish, and supposedly riddled with failure. Now, 25 years after the first millennials began turning 18, Bloomb...erg News reporter Charlie Wells comes to the generation's defense with a cultural history of an adulthood disrupted. Drawing on hundreds of hours of intimate interviews with five millennials from across the country, he explores how the biggest events, ideas, and transformations of the century played out in private lives. Between the data points and statistical studies, news reports and archival records, his brutally honest, on-the-record conversations about love, loss, work, addiction, tragedy, and sacrifice reveal how a generation once minimized can no longer be ignored. What Happened to Millennials charts a path from our nostalgic past to a better future, shaped by the challenges we have surmounted, the people we have loved, and the adults we have become. --

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Personal narratives
Published
New York : Abrams Press 2025
Language
English
Main Author
Charlie Wells (author)
Physical Description
xvii, 268 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-268).
ISBN
9781419770814
  • You Think You Know
  • Part I. Countdown
  • Part II. 13/f/va/bi
  • Part III. The Cupcake Economy
  • Part IV. The Bridge
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bloomberg News editor Wells debuts with a sympathetic yet uneven portrait of millennials. He depicts a generation haunted by the gap between the "impossibly high" expectations set by their childhoods--when "America's primary economic concern" was having "too much money"--and the far more arduous adulthood that followed. He does so by following five individuals whose lives intersect with major events and trends, among them Olivia, whose father died in the 9/11 attacks, and Aaron, who struggled with opioid addiction. Wells treats these individuals' stories with empathy, and, as a millennial himself, excels at conveying the struggles confronted by the entire generation, including the collective trauma of 9/11, which "really did change everything for us"; the increasingly divided political landscape driven by cable news (told through Jon Stewart's notorious 2004 Crossfire appearance); and the difficulty of finding a job in the wake of the Great Recession. However, the book's incisiveness peters out as Wells dials back his political and economic commentary for an exploration of his subjects' romantic relationships (including navigating polyamory). He also waffles at providing "an easy hot take" about "what happened to us," sidestepping this task by pointing out "there are a million versions of us." Though this provides a window into the troubled psyche of a much-discussed generation, the lack of a more insightful takeaway disappoints. (Sept.)

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