


When over 33,000 publishing professionals and book lovers walk through the same doors, you know the books on display matter. Studio of Books was proud to bring such masterpieces at the much-anticipated 2026 London Book Fair.
“The Death Of America By Internal Hate” by James Scott Wynecoop stepped onto the international stage at the 2026 London Book Fair, held 10–12 March at Olympia, London. This year, the book fair welcomed 1,005 exhibitors and more than 33,000 visitors.
The London Book Fair (LBF) is one of the most prestigious events in the publishing world, uniting authors, publishers, literary agents, and industry professionals from over 100 countries. Far beyond a traditional book fair, it is a global marketplace for the sale and distribution of content across print, audio, film, and digital media — where deals are made, voices are amplified, and new stories find their readers.
This is where authors meet publishers, literary agents pitch to foreign buyers, and book lovers discover their next great read. It is, above all, where ideas become movements.
The Death of America by Internal Hate opens with an unsettling truth: the greatest threat to this nation is not gathering at its borders — it is already inside them. Manufactured fear, shattered communities, and a society increasingly addicted to conflict have set a slow fire that no foreign enemy could have started better themselves.
Through a series of unflinching chapters, Wynecoop examines the fault lines widening beneath everyday American life — politics reframed as warfare, truth treated as optional, and the quiet collapse of the communal circles that once held neighbors together. Drawing on Native traditions, including the eagle feather circle, he offers something rare in this conversation: a model of unity, of listening, of remembering that the person across from you is still a person.
The epilogue does not end in despair. It ends in a challenge — to stay awake without surrendering to panic, to choose restraint over retaliation, and to extend the kind of basic human recognition that has always been the difference between a republic that endures and one that quietly fades into apathy.


