In our pursuit of happiness, Americans often look first to secure our comfort, prosperity, and self-esteem. Elizabeth Amato uses some of the best writers that American literature has to offer to upend this notion. Through a keen reading of such novelists as Walker Percy, Tom Wolfe, and Edith Wharton, she reveals the truth that life’s challenges confound the pursuit of material happiness, and through them, offers a reminder that a more lasting and moderate happiness flows from ordered liberty and a concern for the truth and beauty of ordinary life.