Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Awakening of Jennifer Van Arsdale: A novel take on conservative ideas
The Awakening of Jennifer Van Arsdale: A novel take on conservative ideas
Feb 11, 2026 8:07 AM

George Leef has crafted a work of fiction that chronicles the personal and ideological transformation of a D.C. reporter. But does he convince the reader?

Read More…

The year 2016 brought the progressive extreme of American politics into national discussion. Bernie Sanders and Democratic socialism became familiar phrases; Elizabeth Warren promised free daycare and free college; Andrew Yang’s one-issue focus made universal basic e seem plausible. What would America have looked like if one of these progressives had won the White House alongside a Democratic-controlled House and Senate under a packed Supreme Court? George Leef argues that such policies would have ruined the economy, destroyed the balance of powers, and created a tyrannical government obsessed with policing thought, speech, and action. In The Awakening of Jennifer Van Arsdale: A Political Fable for Our Time, Leef explores what could happen were a progressive journalist to discover that her basic view of reality was wrong, and where she might turn to find a better source of truth.

Evaluating The Awakening requires taking the subtitle seriously. Leef’s stock-in-trade is reviewing economics volumes and exposing problems within the academy. In this case, he advances an argument through fiction. The early chapters of Leef’s volume recall Aesop’s Fables. Aesop’s stories have endured for millennia because they conceptualize truth in timeless images: the Tortoise and the Hare, the Scorpion and the Frog, and so on. Children read them and grasp the point; adults read them and recognize the world as it is. Leef has written a fable that conceptualizes the polarity at the heart of contemporary American politics. Leef explores that polarity and invites the reader to consider where each side leads. Few family members would appreciate a volume of Smith or Hayek under the Christmas tree, but many more would likely thumb through the opening chapters of The Awakening. Jennifer is a believable character, and as such she unifies the narrative through her intellectual transformation. The Awakening asks progressives to address where Leef goes wrong in his dystopic prediction of their policies. In provoking such questions, Leef plishes his implicit goal: He is not writing to the converted, but to provoke the Socratic awareness of ignorance within readers who hold views opposite from his own.

The Awakening introduces Jennifer Van Arsdale as a single, childless reporter based out of D.C. Having written for the Washington Post for more than a decade, Jennifer has an established beat covering the growth of progressive politics. She represents the grown-up millennial disconnected from the realities of family and munity, so part of Jennifer’s awakening involves discovering just how deeply she lives within a progressive bubble. The plot takes off when she is invited to interview Pat Farnsworth, the first female president of the United States, so that Jennifer can write the official presidential biography. While in Laguna Beach to interview Farnsworth, Jennifer is attacked by criminals and saved by an (illegally) armed African American retired Navy officer named Willis Collier. Willis es Jennifer’s introduction to the problems progressive politics have caused, and her conversation with Willis is the first in a series that begins her reeducation. By the conclusion of the novel, Jennifer is faced with a choice: How will she act now that she rejects, by conviction, the fundamental precepts of progressivism? Leef hits the sweet spot—his novel is clearly driven by an argument, but conversations advance the plot such that the reader never loses sight of Jennifer’s transformation from a progressive yuppie into a real person.

Leef establishes Farnsworth, however, as a reductio ad absurdum of progressivism: Over her time in office, she establishes a UBI program, guarantees free college, erases Mount Rushmore in her attempt to create national unity (those presidential faces—just oppressive), packs the Supreme Court to destroy the balance of powers, and establishes a national gun-buyback program. As the novel progresses, Leef illustrates the consequences of each progressive program: The UBI disincentivizes work, free college results in lower rates of student participation and success, and minority figures do not care about statues being changed—they just want a strong economy with opportunity for success. In addition, without the Supreme Court as a constitutional check, the party in power rules tyrannically, and that gun buyback program? It only further protects those with illegal guns in the first place. As Jennifer encounters the real results of progressive policies, she illustrates the differing ways left and right anticipate causes and effects in contemporary American politics.

The Biden administration has provided ample demonstration of a polarized America, and the recent leaking of the Dobbs case has further revealed the extent of the opposed worldviews within American politics. Rather than bemoan the existence of polarity, Leef points to the fact that progressivism and classical liberalism each rest upon opposed convictions about freedom, government, and the good life. His novel avoids the temptation of speaking into a conservative echo chamber, but instead asks the reader to consider what life would be like if Elizabeth Warren’s every policy dream were e true. Would life be good in such an America? Leef has a confidence in individual reason that aligns with his classical liberalism, and his novel invites the reader to consider whether an America lacking respect for individual liberty, speech, and property would be worth living in.

He does this through specific conversations Jennifer has with conservative characters. Each of the conversations, delivered by reasonable people who hold convictions not her own, causes Jennifer to consider a specific political claim. For example, Willis Collier says to Jennifer: “This might sound cynical, but I think most politicians would have us remain poor and angry rather than successful and independent. They want us to look to them for salvation, not our own efforts.” Here Leef introduces a core insight of public choice economics—the real motivations and incentives of politicians lies beneath the surface—which aptly illustrates Lord Acton’s observation that absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Willis introduces Jennifer to a group of concerned citizens called the Free Peoples of Laguna Beach. One member, Gordon, argues that “the blame rests with the politicians who keep creating more and more money to cover their insatiable appetite for spending.” The United States as depicted in The Awakening experiences runaway inflation, and progressive politicians use that inflation to justify increased control over the economy and the citizenry.

Another member of the Free Peoples group, Stan, responds to the idea that governments need to police speech and action to prevent discrimination by arguing that “democracy worked due to the moral character of the citizens, not because majority rule automatically produces wise leaders and sound laws.” Democracy depends on the moral foundations of its citizens; people gravitate toward popular figures, not necessarily good ones. The government cannot function as the source of moral wisdom. The attempt to guide the morality of the nation, Leef suggests, masks an insatiable appetite for control of individual actions.

Leef brings a journalist’s concern for integrity to his account of journalistic dishonesty; Jennifer at one point contemplates “an unwritten rule of journalism”: never point out negative effects of progressive politics. People asking about bad policies or their consequences must be shushed; editors of major newspapers must shut down reporters who are interested in the wrong kind of story. Leef paints a picture of mainstream media as an establishment dedicated to critiquing only certain parts of the body politic but not those of their own persuasion.

In addition to the ideas discussed above, Leef includes passages on civil asset forfeiture, violent crime being stopped by armed citizens, and attempts to legislatively engineer group representation. Jennifer eventually begins reading Hayek, Smith, von Mises, and other towering figures of classical liberal thought.

Through characterization, metaphor, and story arc, the reader sympathizes with the protagonist and considers the ideas behind her transformation. The progressive left has owned the literary creative space for decades. The Awakening of Jennifer Van Arsdale proves that intellectuals on the right can craft fables that introduce ideas that shape one’s view of reality. The Awakening makes for a great introduction to the harms of progressive thought, the ways in which reality is plex than progressivism would have you believe in its crude ideological manner, and the patterns of thought classical liberalism proposes instead.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
How flipping hamburgers glorifies God
When we think of the intersection of work and calling, many of us think immediately of our long-term career aspirations. Despite most of usbeginning our careers in some sort of menial labor, these are not the types of services or stations our culture deems significant or inspired. Yet for the Christian, economic transformation begins where creator and producer meets neighbor, no matter the product or service. Our fundamental calling is to love our neighbor, and that begins the moment we...
Study: Americans care more about test score gaps based on wealth than on race or ethnicity
For decades, researchers have documented large differences in average test scores between minority and white students and between poor and wealthy students. But a new study finds that Americans are more concerned about—and more supportive of proposals to close—wealth-based achievement gaps than Black-White or Hispanic-White gaps. “The achievement gap’s ubiquity in policy discourse and implications for American society make it important to understand the public’s beliefs about it,” say the study’s authors, Jon Valant and Daniel A. Newark. “Many proposals...
Radio Free Acton: Kevin Schmiesing on the indivisibility of religious and economic freedom
Radio Free Acton is back for a conversation with Acton Institute Research Fellow Kevin Schmiesing, who served as the editor for Acton’s newest publication,One and Indivisible: The Relationship Between Religious and Economic Freedom. It’s hard to ignore the fact that in recent years, there has been a significant erosion of support for and understanding of religious liberty in western nations. More and more people think of religious liberty only as the right to worship as you please, but not the...
‘I learned more at McDonald’s than at college’
Unlike some colleges, McDonald’s does not have “safe spaces” or “trigger warnings.” Instead, they have a requirement that employees put the concerns of the customers ahead of their own. Olivia Legaspi, an undergraduate at Haverford College and former McDonald’s employee, says that expectation helped her learn an important lesson about work and life: serving es first. ...
How the Shadow Banking System Fueled the Great Recession
Almost a decade has passed since the start of the Great Recession of 2008 and yet many of us are still confused about what caused the financial crisis. We know financial intermediaries like Lehman Brothers played a part, though we’re often unclear on the details. In this video, economist Tyler Cowen explains the role of the “shadow banking” system and how the incentives led to them to take on too much risk and leverage. ...
Technology seen, and unseen
Although not everyone see its, technological progress has meant progress in human flourishing, notes Dylan Pahman in this week’s Acton Commentary. To answer the Luddites, first of all we must acknowledge that there is truth to what is seen. People see workers losing their jobs due to technology. When that happens (and it does), Christians and other people of good will should not be indifferent. However, not all people plain about the loss of manufacturing jobs see even this. The...
Explainer: What you should know about the Libertarian Party platform
Note: This is the secondin a series examining the positions of several minorparty and independent presidential candidates onissues covered by the Acton Institute. A previous series covered the Democratic Party platform (see here and here) and the Republican Party Platform (see here and here). Although minor parties —often called “third parties” to distinguish them from the dominant two — have always been a part of American politics, the dissatisfaction with the Republican and Democratic parties in the current election season...
The family economics of Jennifer Roback Morse
If you’ve attended Acton University in the past few years you’ve probably had the good fortuneto take the required foundational class “Economic Way of Thinking” from Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse. Morse became a leading economist of the family a few decades ago after discovering an assumption made by Adam Smith: The economy depends on the intact family raising children. Morse brought mon sense observation into direct contact with economic analysis in her seminal work Love and Economics, first published in...
Religion & Liberty: Servant leadership in a Louisiana kitchen
Popeyes CEO Cheryl Bachelder Questions about what makes a good or a bad leader dominate many conversations as we approach the 2016 presidential election. Real leadership happens all around us, not just in the Oval Office. As we pulled together the various pieces for this Summer 2016 issue of Religion & Liberty, the informal theme of leadership seemed to connect all the content. For the interview, I was able to sit down with the CEO of Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen, Cheryl...
Trump: ‘They have to work, too’
Today at The Stream I provide some analysis of Donald Trump’s speech earlier this week at the Detroit Economic Club. As I conclude, “The trouble for Trump’s promised future lies in the impossibility of reclaiming a bygone era.” In Trump’s campaign there is a mix of both nostalgia and optimism, which bookend serious critiques of America’s more recent past and the legacy of his political opponents in particular. This approach is appealing to an important, and often overlooked segment of...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved