Giving up is unforgivable A manual for keeping a democracy

Joyce Vance

Book - 2025

"The first book from Joyce White Vance: equal parts civics class, history lesson, and call to save the Republic, Giving Up Is Unforgivable is a political manifesto for our present moment. 'We're in this together.' For the past two years, Joyce Vance has signed off posts on her chart-topping Substack, Civil Discourse, with these four words. In that time, she's guided readers through a continued erosion of democratic norms, the unprecedented felony conviction of an ex-president, and the approaching specter of a second Trump administration. Now that it's upon us, Vance helps us understand how to avoid burnout and despair and exercise the democratic muscles we need to save the Republic. Giving Up Is Unforgivable is... a clarion call to action--putting our current crisis in historical context and sketching out a vision for where we go next. Vance's message is hopeful at its heart, even as it acknowledges the daunting challenges that lie ahead. She is the constitutional law professor you never knew you needed, explaining the legal context, the political history, and the practical reasons that the rule of law still matters, while also empowering you to do something--from the small (that conversation you've been meaning to have with your uncle or volunteering for your favorite political cause) to the big (starting a grassroots movement or running for political office). Consider this the birth of a countermovement to Project 2025, a rallying cry for citizen engagement to counter the second Trump administration and save American democracy"-- Provided by publisher.

Saved in:
1 person waiting
1 copy ordered
1 being processed

2nd Floor New Shelf Show me where

321.8/Vance
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 321.8/Vance (NEW SHELF) Due Dec 14, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Instructional and educational works
Published
New York, NY : Dutton [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Joyce Vance (author)
Physical Description
211 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 179-211).
ISBN
9798217178117
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A look at the wreckage wrought thus far by the present administration, and what can be done about it. In a book that seems sometimes relentlessly optimistic, former U.S. attorney Vance--she resigned the day before President Trump's first inauguration--opens with the realization that, in the first salvos of his second term, she had been focusing on all that was wrong and not with all that was right: "The rule of law was being bent, but it was not broken." She then exhorts readers, "Don't be the frog," the one in the pot that's being slowly heated and will thus cook to death without complaint. The metaphor is useful to the extent that, as she notes, that's how dictators come to power, in "a slow slide toward tyranny, easily dismissed for far too long by far too much of the populace." Anyone who'd been paying the slightest attention to the news knew about Project 2025, yet many dismissed it, even as Trump professed to know nothing of it, and even as he's been busily enacting it ever since. Vance, it should be said, is no Pollyanna; she has a clear vision of what's unfolding around her, paying close attention to the administration's supposed insistence that it's just enforcing the law ("Dictators like to cloak their early steps in the appearance of legality") while undoing the courts. The optimism, whether warranted or not, comes in with Vance's insistence that "we have a republic to keep, and we are not quitters." But what of all the boiling frogs? Vance offers useful pointers on how to avoid the pot and exercise one's constitutional rights, most important of them voting, reminding us--optimistically--that "the way to challenge the bully is at the ballot box." A hopeful manifesto for a renewed democracy. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.