The Overton Window
The Overton Window book cover

The Overton Window

Mass Market Paperback – December 28, 2010

Price
$9.99
Publisher
Threshold Editions
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1451625288
Dimensions
4.13 x 1 x 7.5 inches
Weight
10.7 ounces

Description

"A novel ripped from today's headlines and destined to be as controversial as it is eye-opening. No matter your politics, this Hitchcockian thriller will have you turning pages well into the night." --James Rollins, "New York Times" bestselling author"A visionary work of fiction. One of the best thrillers I've read in years." --Vince Flynn, "New York Times" bestselling author"From the moment you open Glenn Beck's The Overton Window, you are looking through his eyes -- and like the best thriller writers out there, Glenn knows that the very best way to scare us is to show us what can really happen. Get ready to sleep with the lights on. This is the one. You'll never look at history the same way again." -#1 NYT bestselling author Brad Meltzer"Glenn Beck has just shattered the fiction barrier. "The Overton Window" is the "perfect" all-American thriller." --Brad Thor, #1 "New York Times" bestselling author"Glenn Beck never fails to amaze. "The Overton Window", a rip-roaring read of the first order, is as good a political thriller as you're going to find this year." --Nelson DeMille, " New York Times" bestselling author Glenn Beck, the nationally syndicated radio host and founder of TheBlaze television network, has written thirteen #1 bestselling books and is one of the few authors in history to have had #1 national bestsellers in the fiction, nonfiction, self-help, and children’s picture book genres. His recent fiction works include the thrillers Agenda 21 , The Overton Window , and its sequel, The Eye of Moloch ; his many nonfiction titles include The Great Reset , Conform , Miracles and Massacres , Control , and Being George Washington . For more information about Glenn Beck, his books, and TheBlaze television network, visit GlennBeck.com and TheBlaze.com. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1 Most people think about age and experience in terms of years, but it’s really only moments that define us. We stay mostly the same and then grow up suddenly, at the turning points. His life being pretty sweet just as it was, Noah Gardner had devoted a great deal of effort in his first twenty-something years to avoiding such defining moments at all costs. Not that his time had gone entirely wasted. Far from it. For one thing, he’d spent a full decade building what most guys would call an outstanding record of success with the ladies. Good-looking, great job, fine education, puckishly amusing and even clever when he put his mind to it, reasonably fit and trim for an office jockey, Noah had all the bona fide credentials for a killer eHarmony profile. Since freshman year at NYU he’d rarely spent a weekend night alone; all he’d had to do was keep the bar for an evening’s companionship set at only medium-high. As he’d rounded the corner of age twenty-seven and stared the dreaded number thirty right in the face, Noah had begun to realize something about that medium-high bar: it takes two to tango. While he’d been aiming low with his standards in the game of love, the women he’d been meeting might all have been doing exactly the same thing. Now, on his twenty-eighth birthday, he still wasn’t sure what he wanted in a woman but he knew what he didn’t want: arm candy. He was sick of it. Maybe, just maybe, it was time to consider thinking about getting serious. It was in the midst of these deep ruminations on life and love that the woman of his dreams first caught his eye. There was nothing remotely romantic about the surroundings or the situation. She was standing on tiptoe, reaching up high to pin a red, white, and blue flier onto a patch of open cork on the company bulletin board. And he was watching, frozen in time between the second and third digits of his afternoon selection at the snack machine. Top psychologists tell us in Maxim magazine that the all-important first impression is set in stone within about ten seconds. That might not sound like much, but when you count it off it’s a long damn time for a guy to stare uninvited at a female coworker. By the four-second mark Noah had made three observations. First, she was hot, but it was an aloof and effortless hotness that almost double-dared you to bring it up. Second, she wasn’t permanent staff, probably just working as a seasonal temp in the mailroom or another high-turnover department. And third, even in that lowly position, she wasn’t going to survive very long at Doyle & Merchant. They say you should dress for the job you want, not the job you have. That’s especially true in the public relations business, considering that that’s where appearance is reality. Apparently the job this girl wanted was head greeter at the Grateful Dead Cultural Preservation Society. But that wasn’t quite right; she didn’t strike him as a wannabe hipster or a retro-sixties flower child. It was more than the clothes, it was the whole picture, the way she carried herself, like a genuine free spirit. An appealing vibe, to be sure, but there was really no place for that sort of thing—neither the outfit nor the attitude—in the buttoned-up world of top-shelf New York City PR. At about five seconds into his first impression, something else about her struck him, and he completely lost track of time. What struck him was a word, or, more precisely, the meaning of a word: line. More powerful than any other element of design, a line is the living soul of a piece of art. It’s the reason a simple logo can be worth tens of millions of dollars to a corporation. It’s the thing that makes you believe that a certain car, or a pair of sunglasses, or the cut of a jacket can make you into the person you want to be. The definition he’d received from an artist friend was rendered not in words but in a picture. Just seven light strokes of a felt-tip marker on a blank white page and before his eyes had appeared the purest essence of a woman. There was nothing lewd about it, but it was the sexiest drawing Noah had ever seen in his life. And that is what struck him. There it was at the bulletin board, that same exquisite line, from the toes of her sandals all the long, lovely way up to her fingertips. Unlikely as it must seem, he knew right then that he was in love. © 2009 Glenn Beck Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A plan to destroy America, a hundred years in the making, is about to be unleashed . . . can it be stopped? There is a powerful technique called the Overton Window that can shape our lives, our laws, and our future. It works by manipulating public perception so that ideas previously thought of as radical begin to seem acceptable over time. Move the Window and you change the debate. Change the debate and you change the country. For Noah Gardner, a twentysomething public relations executive, it’s safe to say that political theory is the furthest thing from his mind. Smart, single, handsome, and insulated from the world’s problems by the wealth and power of his father, Noah is far more concerned about the future of his social life than the future of his country. But all of that changes when Noah meets Molly Ross, a woman who is consumed by the knowledge that the America we know is about to be lost forever. She and her group of patriots have vowed to remember the past and fight for the future—but Noah, convinced they’re just misguided conspiracy-theorists, isn’t interested in lending his considerable skills to their cause. And then the world changes. An unprecedented attack on U.S. soil shakes the country to the core and puts into motion a frightening plan, decades in the making, to transform America and demonize all those who stand in the way. Amidst the chaos, many don’t know the difference between conspiracy theory and conspiracy fact—or, more important, which side to fight for. But for Noah, the choice is clear: Exposing the plan, and revealing the conspirators behind it, is the only way to save both the woman he loves and the individual freedoms he once took for granted. After five back-to-back #1 New York Times bestsellers, national radio and Fox News television host Glenn Beck has delivered a ripped-from-the-headlines thriller that seamlessly weaves together American history, frightening facts about our present condition, and a heart-stopping plot. The Overton Window will educate, enlighten, and, most important, entertain—with twists and revelations no one will see coming.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(858)
★★★★
25%
(358)
★★★
15%
(215)
★★
7%
(100)
-7%
(-101)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Good but scary

Hmmm - a good read, but it scared the pants off me.

Well, that sounds simplistic, but after a lot of thought, it's true. I happened to watch Beck on Fox when he was talking about the concept of the overton window & how it works (an actual technique of changing group attitudes). Scared me then & it scares me now.

So, the story is just the vehicle Beck uses to show his perspective of what's happening in today's world. There are 40 pages of documentation of source material - honestly overwhelming. He says repeatedly 'do your own research', but I'm not sure how many casual readers will do just that. Maybe they feel as I do - what would I do if I found even half of this stuff true? Well, it's more than I can handle & just reading the list of sources is difficult.

I think we, the people of the United States, are probably heading down the same path traveled numerous times before us by other great nations (Romans, Greeks). And unless we make huge changes - that many won't do - we'll probably continue down the path to ruin. Wouldn't have thought these things 20 years ago, but now it seems almost a given.
15 people found this helpful
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I was not expecting this book to be as good as it was

I have to admit, I was not expecting this book to be as good as it was. Glenn Beck has a very fluid writing style and tells this story through the eyes of a surprisingly relatable and somewhat endearing main character.

This story does not focus on politics at all. Does it have political themes? Of course it does, but it presents a surprisingly common sense, human, approach to the concepts and doesn't try to shove any one agenda down your throat.

Whether you like Glenn Beck's views or not, I strongly advise reading this book before you dismiss it. The book does not disappoint. I can't wait for the next installment.
13 people found this helpful
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Hideous

Seriously... I don't quite know what to say about this poorly written paranoid fantasy. I couldn't get through it. And my understanding is that Glenn Beck doesn't even write his own novels... he purchases books other people have been written, makes some editorial changes, and slaps his name on them. Either that, or he's just a really lousy writer.
9 people found this helpful
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Great thriller and thought provoking

First off before I write my review, let me say one thing. I guess this is my own pathology in that I like to look at the one star ratings on every book before I write a review, because somewhere deep down inside I think I'll find some objectivity. But other then the typical bad reviews an author gets, "such as the book sucked," most of these bad reviews are by people who simply hate the author and are more fans of George Soros. The reviews that I find the most amusing are the ones that start off like: "Well first let me say that I am a conservative, however, I find that this book is purely, racist, homophobic, hateful and further more it just plain boring." Funny thing is that if you look up a book by Noan Chomsky you never see one bad review that starts off such as," Although I am a leftist I found Mr. Chomsky's book to be very unfair and biased regarding America and it was just plain boring...." You know why you won't find that because generally conservatives don't pretend to be leftists and have morals in which they live by or try to live by and leftists have no morals to live by because to them, the ends justifies the means. With having said that, now onto the review.

The book is an excellent thriller if you take it as a thriller. Yes there are facts intertwined with the story but one can get too caught up in conspiratorial thinking and one has to take the facts Mr. Beck sights in context. Yes there are many underhanded people who do underhanded things but when has it not been that way? One of the commments that Glenn makes in the book is that, "the only thing that your average 30 year old knows about World War II is from watching Saving Private Ryan." I personally don't think that is such a bad thing especially if it moves the interest to reading about World War II as was the exact case with me as now I am a amatuer historian of World War II and read Ambrose, Atkinson, the Stack Pole series and so forth.

Aside from those minor criticisms, the book is thought provoking and it did make me print out the U.S. constitution and read it-as I have not done that in years. As Americans we really have forgotten what freedom is and that it has to be fought for in order to be kept. With the fact that man is basically corrupt and narcissistic, he will always seek power and think he knows more then his fellow man the way that George Soros and Adolf Hitler have demonstrated.

History has shown us time and time again that those who rest on their laurels and are complacent end up being the slave to the slavemaster. America is a brand new country in terms of history and their are so many who are jealous of our way of life and hate the U.S. Constitution from other countries. I am not worried about them so much as I am worried about those who live in our borders who want to see America "reformed" which is a code word for transformed. It is shocking that this country didn't go ballistic more then it did when Obama and the Democrats rammed through healthcare. But that seems to be what the Overton Window is all about. Just do a little at a time.

If Obama and the Dems did what they did 40 years ago with healthcare, this would have probably caused another Civil War. But think about it this way; In 1935 the Anglican Church was the first Christian Church to give the okay on birth control and Pope Pius stated then that this will open the door for legalized abortion some day. They called him a kook. Obviously the Pope was right and abortion on demand is legal today. That is how it starts. Obviously the federal governmnet couldn't have come out and told people in 1935 that they were going to fund partial birth abortions and many in the Church were behind it, or only those Church's who hire and employ homosexuals will continue to recieve tax benefits. Just like this book shows that these things have to be done slowly over a period of time and like Raul Emmanuel says, "Never let a good crisis go to waste." Make up statistics, lie, and deceive such as telling people if you don't legalize abortion that thousands of women will continue to die from having, "back alley abortions" (actually nothing of the sort ever happened, any illegal abortion was exceedingly rare).

The characters in the book were interesting which is rare in a thriller where the characters usually just provide a backdrop for a thriller. In otherwords you got to know Noah and Molly and Bailey and what they believed. You get to understand the character of Arthur Gardner which I think is a compilation of George Soros and other like minded individuals whose thinking is evil.

After reading this book I can see how Hitler did what he did. Hitler figured out after the 1923 Beer Hall Putsch that he was never going to win Germany by force and had to take control of Germany by working within the system (a exceedingly weak social democracy)and introducing things little by little, such as blaming the intellectuals and Jews for the economy. Read William Shirer's book "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich," and the chapter called the," Nazification of Germany" and see the similarities to what Hitler did and what is going on in the U.S. today. If you can't see the parallels and if this doesn't frighten you then nothing ever will and your brain dead.

If we do not watch what our elected leaders do then the same will happen to American except on a grander scale. We have to be vigilant and ask help and guidance from our Creator. As long as we are lead by God then we will win, but the moment that man thinks he is smarter then his fellow man, better, or doesn't need God we are doomed. And when I say God I don't mean some New Age pantheistic god. I mean the God of our forefathers, the God who gave us the law and told Moses to part the Red Sea and the God who came down to earth and died on a cross for all of us. That is the God that men like George Soros, Noam Chomsky and Adolf Hitler don't know and let's pray that they will come to know Him, at least with Chomsky and Soros, it's too late for Hitler.
8 people found this helpful
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No Lee Child. That's for sure

I love thrillers and finish one, on average, every two or three days. Since I read so fast and am particularly fond of series with continuing characters, I'm always looking for new authors. To be honest, I'm not a fan of
Glenn Beck or his right wing cohorts and probably wouldn't have bought The Overton Window if there hadn't been a price sticker on the cover over his name.

What caught my eye were some of the raves on the cover from other thriller authors. Based on that, I thought I'd give The Overton Window a try. However, I was yawning by the third chapter and I knew this particular yarn was a non-starter. Since I couldn't get my money back, after chucking The Overton Window against the wall, I traded it off at a used book store for something more palatable.

Having grown up in Europe more years ago than I care to think about, I spent quite a bit of time traveling back and forth from the UK to Belgium by plane and across France by train in the 1950's. Knowing what I know about the history of bottled water, (i.e. Perrier etc), I'm particularly offended by Mr Beck's plot premise that the American public was duped into buying bottled water by the psychological manipulations of an American advertising genius, (who was probably in diapers in the 1950's) and that that is how this particular industry came about.

Historically, Mr Beck's suggestion as to how the public's love affair with bottled water began is as far from the truth as it can possibly get. So-called 'designer waters' like Perrier came about for health reasons. Not only do these traditional brands contain desirable minerals, much of the tap water in France, Spain and other foreign countries was not safe to drink at that time. Especially for travelers in railway stations.

Unfortunately, Americans, as a breed, have a tendency to overdo whatever the newest Big Thing happens to be at any given time; sometimes with unfortunate results. US marketers know this and have taken full advantage. Every week, I observe supermarket shoppers loading their carts with cases of bottled water with fancy names about which they know little or nothing. As long as it's in a plastic or glass bottle, they assume it's superior to tap water, even though that may be all it is.

Consumer stupidity is not the stuff of which thrillers are made, and this particular work is not only historically inaccurate, it's actually boring.

Mr Beck needs to stick to the political rhetoric he knows best and leave the creation of thrillers to seasoned authors like Lee Child, Jeffery Deaver and David Baldacci who not only understand and respect the genre, they know what their audience wants.
7 people found this helpful
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Ugh...

Unfortunately, I could not get into the book. It was actually slow moving from first page to last and I struggled to finish it thinking it might get better. To be honest, since it was boring for me to read, I kind of lost what the whole premise was all about, so if anyone at LibraryThing has read this, please let me know what I missed. :(
6 people found this helpful
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Boring

Having listened to Glenn Beck, I was eagerly anticipating a novel of suspense that tied in with the political and religious atmosphere that fills our country's airwaves today. I confess I didn't get very far. I was so bored that I did something I have only done twice before in reading over 800 books, quit without finishing it.
5 people found this helpful
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Don't waste your time.

Well, let's start-off with the really fascinating and enjoyable part of this book.

OK, let's move onto a few problems. I'm a big mystery/thriller fan. I gave-up on this book halfway through. It was just too painfully dull. I didn't care about the characters and I found myself unconcerned about what was going to happen next, let alone at the end.
There are many, many books out there by lesser known "authors" that are much better than this.
4 people found this helpful
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Good book with interesting take on possibilities.

I wasn't sure what to expect from Glenn Beck. I don't watch his show, but I do watch Fox News.

It was well written, an interesting take on what "could" already be happening in our world and was a fast read. I enjoyed the characters enough I would look forward to buying the next installment (if he writes one).

The "Overton Window" concept was very informative and has caused me to view things differently. I am even more cautious about taking the news and political decisions at "face value".
3 people found this helpful
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Confusing story

Beck appears to have prepared a list of favorite quotes from historic figures and contemporary news stories and woven them into his story.

There are some interesting historical characters he presents including the man, Joseph Overton, for whom the story is titled. His discussion about Edward Bernays as the father of propaganda (public relations) is good.

He takes a cheap, unjustified swipe (276) at Saul Alinsky and associates him with the idea that the end justified the means. That is an old idea and appeared in Niccolo Machiavelli's book "The Prince". In fact, Alinsky refutes that idea in his Rules for Radicals.

Ultimately Beck's book can be added to the pile of books describing conspiracy theories. It should reside not on the top or the bottom but someplace in the lower middle.
2 people found this helpful