Reviews

Hope in the Dark: Untold Histories, Wild Possibilities by Rebecca Solnit

daniquewijnia's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

3.75

payblossom's review against another edition

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inspiring slow-paced

5.0

tolmeia's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.25

terroreesa's review against another edition

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2.0

sigh.
I guess I had too much hope in this book to give me the comfort I needed post-election. I appreciate Solnit and her activism, and her examples are great. but I think I wanted something else from her, not just a rehash of Paradise Built in Hell.

jakeallen's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring fast-paced

4.0

tomrrandall's review against another edition

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4.0

Feels a little disjointed chapter-to-chapter, but otherwise great.

adamm's review against another edition

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3.0

There is A LOT I adored about this but dear god was it repetitive, it felt like the book was a good 500 pages longer than it actually was

floweringwords's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring

4.5

bluestarfish's review against another edition

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5.0

It's a book for the activist who has made it so far and it is offered with hope. The indirectness of the consequences of our actions makes them difficult to believe in sometimes so Rebecca Solnit shines the light on some of the history we should be holding up alongside everything that needs changing, because this and this and this bit DID change. I loved the image of the inheritance of the Puritans being passed onto the left... Change is possible and hope is possible, and both are necessary. Great to hear this for a change!

jwinchell's review against another edition

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5.0

This was a slow and deliberate read in part because these are indeed very dark times and because I am often grasping for hope. At one point my boys asked me, "Mama, why do you read with a pencil?" And though I wanted to say "because Mama is full of political rage and despair for our democracy and environment and all civil rights," I chose to say: "because these ideas are very important and are giving me ideas for how to speak up for what I believe." Both are true.

With this book I will do one of my creative journal entries and will also host a discussion with OP Progressive Women. Both will build further strength in me.

I'm gonna give up a treasure from the very ending that is not, in my humble opinion, a spoiler--instead, it should be every reason to dig into this important, prescient, pithy, illuminating book and then get back to your work:

"How do we get back to the struggle over the future? I think you have to hope, and hope in this sense is not a prize or a gift, but something you earn through study, through resisting the ease of despair, and through digging tunnels, cutting windows, opening doors, or finding the people who do these things. They exist."

and then:

"I believe that you can talk about both the terrible things we should engage with and the losses behind us, as well as the wins and achievements that give us the confidence to endeavor to keep pursuing the possibilities. I write to give aid and comfort to people who feel overwhelmed by the defeatist perspective, to encourage people to stand up and participate, to look forward at what we can do and back at what we have done."