• "Well written, well researched, and the thesis put forth is well argued.... Woods has opened up an area of historical analysis that should invite further study."
    -Journal of American History

  • "During these times that challenge our freedoms there is no one more qualified to make U.S. history relevant to the fight against big government than Thomas Woods."
    -Barry Goldwater Jr.
    Former Member of Congress

  • "I strongly recommend Woods's work."
    -The Honorable Ron Paul,
    U.S. House of Representatives

  • "Written with great clarity and fluency, making the complex philosophical and theological concepts approachable."
    -Journal of American Studies

  • "A must-read."
    -Barron's

  • "An excellent reading source for anyone interested in financial markets, and much more so for anyone interested in learning about capitalism without all the misinterpretations being thrown about in the financial media."
    -Asia Times

  • "Provocative, well-written, and deserves to be read."
    -Catholic Historical Review

  • "An engaging and important contribution to scholarship on the history of American Catholicism."
    -Journal of the Historical Society

  • "Woods and [co-author Kevin] Gutzman appeal to both left and right in this constitutionalist jeremiad…. The authors' exegeses of the Constitution and court decisions, heavy on original intent arguments, are lucid and telling."
    -Publishers Weekly

  • "A marvelous read. Every chapter taught me something new and unexpected."
    -Tom Bethell, senior editor,
    The American Spectator

  • "The hottest book today is Meltdown, by my friend Tom Woods."
    -Judge Andrew Napolitano, senior judicial analyst,
    FOX News Channel

  • "Should be required reading."
    -Economic Affairs (London)

  • "Woods, one of the best classical liberal [libertarian] scholars of his generation, has once more placed us in his debt with this lucid and tightly argued book."
    -David Gordon, The Mises Review

  • "Tom Woods is one of my dearest allies in the struggle against wrong-headed and dangerous economic policy."
    -Peter Schiff

Follow Me on Facebook

My personal account has reached the 5,000-friend limit, but I’ve since taken over as administrator of a Thomas E. Woods Jr. fan page someone started some time ago.  I’ll be posting there more and more.

  • http://www.twitter.com/jhonsun Jhonsun

    Hey Tom, why not join the Austrian community on Twitter too?

  • http://www.thomasewoods.com woods

    Forgive me, but how do I do that?

  • http://www.twitter.com/jhonsun Jhonsun

    It is a lot like joining Facebook. Sign up for an account at Twitter.com and start “following” other Twitter users. For every person or organization you follow, their real-time updates will appear on your Twitter page. The quickest way to start would be to sign up for an account and follow me at http://www.twitter.com/jhonsun (click on my ‘Follow’ button). You can look at who I am following (you’ll find several libertarian and Austrian organizations, individuals, etc.) and then follow them as well. That will get your foot in the door.

    To find other Twitter users to follow, check websites like Mises, YAL, C4L, Independent Institute, Lew Rockwell, etc. because they almost always promote their Twitter & Facebook accounts on their respective home pages. Also, as soon as you advertise that you are on Twitter, I’m sure many folks will automatically begin following you too.

    BTW, it doesn’t just have to be economists either. You can follow anyone you want. Any average person (like me) or news organizations, celebrities, musicians, politicians, local information – anyone or anything you have the slightest interest in following on a real-time basis. No one has to accept you as a follower. You just click and then you start getting their updates. That doesn’t mean that you can’t block people, but Twitter is more of an “opt-out” type of service.