The Prince George Citizen

‘Resistance’ books scheduled for 2018

- Hillel ITALIE

NEW YORK — At The Booksmith in San Francisco, they’re trying to keep up with all the antiTrump releases and other works of the “resistance.”

“It’s staggering, the number of books,” says store manager and leader buyer Camden Avery.

“Politics has a much more prominent place in our store and for our customers than we’ve had for a long time.”

The rise of Donald Trump has been mirrored by an expanding literary genre that will intensify in 2018, with dozens of new works expected, on top of the dozens from last year. Books of “resistance” will include guides to activism, reflection­s on democracy, investigat­ions of Russian interferen­ce in last year’s election and legal analysis, along with fiction.

Trump’s election revived interest in such classic Dystopian novels as 1984 and The Handmaid’s Tale, and an upcoming compilatio­n, It Occurs to Me That I Am America: New Stories and Art, also uses narrative as a form of social consciousn­ess. The book, which will help support the American Civil Liberties Union, includes original material by such authors as Neil Gaiman and Mary Higgins Clark.

“I asked that contributo­rs write stories and fiction because I didn’t want more political rhetoric,” says the book’s editor, Jonathan Sant- lofer. “I wanted to do something people would enjoy reading and holding and looking at. A story is something that can convey feeling and even a message without being more polemic.”

This month marks not just the one-year anniversar­y of Trump’s presidency, but also of the massive women’s marches staged the day after his inaugurati­on. Together We Rise: Behind the Scenes at the Protest Heard Around the World includes essays by Roxane Gay, Ashley Judd and America Ferrera. Keep Marching: How Every Woman Can Take Action and Change Our World, by activist and Women’s March speaker Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, features “proven tactics, policy solutions and strategies any woman can use to build her power.”

Several new works will address challenges to our system of government. How Democracie­s Die, by Harvard professors Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, traces the demise of political rights in countries around the world.

David Frum’s Trumpocrac­y warns against the “complacent optimism” that American politics are immune from fatal damage.

Amy Siskind’s The List compiles her widely read online annal of breaks from democratic tradition during 2017. Timothy Snyder is following his bestsellin­g On Tyranny, a brief handbook about signs of authoritar­ianism, with The Road to Unfreedom: Russia, Europe, America. Snyder is a history professor at Yale University and his new book looks at threats to democracy in the U.S. and overseas.

“For me at least the point of On Tyranny was to get ahead: knowing what we know of the past, we have to act quickly in the present,” Snyder wrote in a recent email. “In the next book, I try to show us our own moment in history, so that we see what we treasure by observing how it is attacked. The point of Road to Unfreedom is responsibi­lity: as we act to preserve threatened political virtues, we make ourselves into the kinds of citizens who can make a better future.”

Labeling a “resistance” book can be as challengin­g as defining the resistance movement. Disdain for the president is the unifier for authors who might otherwise have little to say to each other, from Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Khan-Cullors, whose memoir When They Call You a Terrorist is due this month, to Frum, a former George W. Bush speechwrit­er; to author-journalist Sarah Kendzior, a prominent commentato­r on authoritar­ianism whose 2015 e-book The View from Flyover Country is being reissued this spring in paperback.

Trump opponents have been enjoying Fire and Fury, Michael Wolff’s explosive tell-all about the administra­tion.

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 ?? DEY STREET/ST. MARTIN’S PRESS/CROWN/TIM DUGGAN BOOKS HANDOUT IMAGES VIA AP ?? This combinatio­n photo shows book covers for Together We Rise: Behind the Scenes at the Protest Heard Around the World, by Women’s March Organizers and Conde Nast; When They Call You a Terrorist: A Black Lives Matter Memoir by Patrisse Khan-Cullors and...
DEY STREET/ST. MARTIN’S PRESS/CROWN/TIM DUGGAN BOOKS HANDOUT IMAGES VIA AP This combinatio­n photo shows book covers for Together We Rise: Behind the Scenes at the Protest Heard Around the World, by Women’s March Organizers and Conde Nast; When They Call You a Terrorist: A Black Lives Matter Memoir by Patrisse Khan-Cullors and...

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