Only after laying this groundwork does Olson hone in on healthcare, specically. As we would expect, Olsons focus on healthcare emphasizes not only the huge market opportunities healthcare presents in the US, but moral outrage at private equitys tendency to treat healthcare as just another industry to be exploited, with no special concern for the impact that such nancial tactics have on lives. To show private equitys reach, subsequent chapters explore a wide array of topics, with Olson starkly declaring that nowadays acquisitions and mergers are skyrocketing in all niches(p. 127). Perhaps the most disturbing aspects of Olsons accounting of private equi- tys pilfering of American healthcare are her detailed discussions of equitys rapacious takeover of areas in which patients are particularly vulnerable, such as the largely for-prot home healthcare industry, as well as equitys deleterious eects on specic disease treatments, from addiction, to autism, to eating disorders. The sweeping examination Olson provides of private equitys inroads into every corner of the massive American healthcare industry provides a sense of just how far equitys reach has extended. Depressingly, though honestly, Olson does not oer any reason for us to be optimistic that there are limits to this reach. As she explains in the closing pages of the book, state and federal action will be required if the malignant forces she describes are to be curbed. But given the degree of regulatory and legislative capture that private equity has already accomplished, the reader is given little reason to hope that a progressive democratic politics will arise to serve as a counterweight. Even more concerning is that there is little reason to believe that any lessons were learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, which actually provided investment opportunities for private equity to not only prey upon struggling healthcare practices, but to leverage federal relief funding for shrewd nancial gains. Taken together, Swenson and Olsons books give us dierent but similarly stark examples of why American healthcare policy continues to frustrate, and especially why progressive reform that puts patients and populations rst is so elusive. Critics of American healthcare often fail to train their analyses on the actual forces that ultimately shape American health policy, which are lodged in the institutional underbellies of little-understood entities. While the inner workings of the organizations such as the AMAthe subject of Swensons bookare not some- thing most Americans know much about, Olson shows that private equity is actively shrouded in secrecy, and hence extremely dicult to study, even for scholars who admirably dedicate themselves to the cause. Transparencyor the lack thereofis therefore a uni- fying theme across both books, whether we are concerned with shadowy advertising and consultancy arrangements, nondisclosure agreements, or other tools of opacity. Even more than transparency, however, readers will be struck by the question of animating values. For Swenson, the question is whether the AMA of the future, in a reversal of the last hundred years of its history, will transform itself to become a force for good within the larger eld of American healthcare, especially by making public health and preventive care a priority. Olsons question is whether private equitys singular focus on prots can be reined in, especially through federal policy. While the fate of the AMA will be determined in a primarily endogenous manner, as a function of internal deliberations within the bodys House of Delegates, Olson is under no illusion that only congressional action can prevent private equitys assault on American healthcare. Private equity is, after all, ethically challenged. Shorn of the sentimental veneer that allows medical professionals to recite oaths claiming that doing no harm is their central concern, these books remind us, in impor- tant ways, that medicine is at base just another industry ripe for the picking to those principally interested in reaping prots. There is just too much stakeholder power and investment potential in American medicine to sustain the ction that medicine somehow operates outside of the vagaries of American capitalism, or that it is a special kind of commodity. Like so many other challenges in American healthcare, the only solution appears to be a revitalized progressive politicsboth within organizations and beyondto recongure American healthcare institutions so that they meaningfully operate in the public interest. And yet, few readers are likely to be sanguine about the prospects that such a politics will arise any time soon. Rap and Politics: A Case Study of Panther, Gangster, and Hyphy Discourses in Oakland, CA (19652010). By Lavar Pope. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020. 338p. $89.99 cloth. doi:10.1017/S1537592722002869 Najja K. Baptist , University of Arkansas nbaptist@uark.edu Lavar Popes Rap and Politics: A Case Study of Panther, Gangster, and Hyphy Discourses in Oakland, CA (1965 2010) discovers the birth and transmutation of rap music as a megaphone of everyday Black lived experiences in Oakland, CA. Popes study employs novel methods to capture imagery of militancy, internal colonization, and warfare lyrics that aided in the forming Black political identity in the Bay Area and Oakland. By expanding on themes found in the study of politics, African American studies, and history, Pope guides a discussion around Black political alienation and the communitys reaction to such estrangement. Throughout Rap and Politics, Pope shines a oodlight on the failings of the American system and its stagnated pursuit to provide equity to the Black community. The masterful way in which Pope intertwines his own lived experiences in the Bay Area rap scene with the narratives of the locales most dauntless revolutionaries December 2022 | Vol. 20/No. 4 1459 https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592722002869 Published online by Cambridge University Press