Celeste Headlee

Even as a student of this field, I found myself underlining and highlighting passages on every page. Dolly Chugh gets to the very heart of what is preventing progress and loosens those bonds gently and with deep humanity. This book is grounded in solid research and lived experience, but also in empathy. Absolutely everyone who reads it will find useful advice on how to be a better person.

Celeste Headlee, PBS host, award-winning journalist, and author of We Need to Talk and Speaking of Race

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Angela Duckworth

Dolly Chugh is the wisest and warmest of behavioral scientists. Let her show you how to unpack your own mistaken assumptions about our past so that our unconditional love for our nation can co-exist with unflinching honesty. Patriotism need not be simplistic to be idealistic. This book is a welcome and urgent invitation to open our eyes to the past and become better ancestors today.

Angela Duckworth, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Grit

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Kenji Yoshino

In the Japanese art of kintsugi, artisans take broken pottery and restore it by sealing the cracks with precious metals. In this instant classic, Chugh teaches us her version of that art to address our own fractured national history. Instead of ignoring cracks or discarding shards, she shows us how to restore the past in a way that makes the future feel all the more startling and precious. This book is required reading for all patriots who love their country enough to see its wounds—and heal them..

Kenji Yoshino, author of Covering

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Uché Blackstock

This is the thoughtful and brilliant work we’ve all been waiting for that will help readers grapple with our legacy of systemic racism — both past and present. A More Just Future expertly provides readers with indispensable practical and evidence-based tools to overcome the psychological barriers that impede us from truly reckoning with injustice.­

Uché Blackstock, MD, founder of Advancing Health Equity, author of Legacy

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