Malcolm Gladwell Doesn’t Care If You Agree With Him

In his new book ‘Talking to Strangers,’ the author courts criticism

Alex Pappademas
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Malcolm Gladwell speaks onstage at Featured Session: Self-Driving Cars: The Future is When? with Malcolm Gladwell & Chris Urmson during the 2019 SXSW Conference and Festivals at Austin Convention Center. Photo: Samantha Burkardt/Getty Images

OnOn July 10, 2015, a state trooper named Brian Encinia pulled over a silver Hyundai Azera on a tree-lined street in the city of Prairie View, Texas. The driver, who had failed to signal before changing lanes, was a 28-year-old African American woman named Sandra Bland. Asserting that she was not under arrest, Bland refused to comply with several of Encinia’s orders. Their interaction quickly became contentious. Once Bland exited her vehicle, Encinia and another officer physically restrained her. She was arrested and charged with assault for kicking Encinia during this altercation. Three days later she was found hanged in police custody, an apparent suicide.

Malcolm Gladwell’s new book Talking to Strangers is not about how Bland died, but about why — how a lane change and a seemingly routine traffic stop turned into a tragedy. Critics of Gladwell’s work accuse him of boiling down complex social and scientific research into books of 21st-century fables for business-class Kindle-flippers; in Strangers, he’s confronting some of the more difficult questions raised by an increasingly off-the-rails world. But it’s still a Malcolm Gladwell book, fueled by counterintuition and the thrill of the hunt for surprising connections…

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