Blue Grit

Making Impossible, Improbable, and Inspirational Political Change in America

 
4.50 based on 9 reviews.

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Paperback Book, 256 pages

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Product Description

Noted political commentator Laura Flanders investigates the state of American politics from the bottom up

With her trademark wit and indefatigable reporting, Laura Flanders, host of RadioNation and bestselling author of Bushwomen: Tales of a Cynical Species, reveals as only she can the state of progressive America today. All over the country, grassroots organizations are making a difference, and democrats of all stripes are doing what the national party has failed to do: engage new voters, advance progressive issues, and even run their own candidates for office—and win—in some of the most unlikely places. With a fiery polemic, assured narrative, and acute political commentary, Blue Grit is crucial reading for anyone interested in the future of the Democrats—and this country.

Product Details

  • Subtitle: Making Impossible, Improbable, and Inspirational Political Change in America
  • Media: Paperback Book, 256 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) (January 29, 2008)
  • Edition: First Printing
  • ISBN-10: 0143113224
  • ISBN-13: 9780143113225
  • Dimensions: 5.2 x 7.7 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.35 lbs
  • Note: Some of this information came from Amazon.com

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Customer Reviews

  • Rating True Blue  Apr 16, 2007 (21 of 23 found this helpful)

    Laura has made a career of spotlighting and supporting the people. She not only reminds her readers (and listeners) the power lies with us, but more importantly, politics is not just for the politicians. Blue Grit is a guidebook for anyone wanting to get involved in changing the Democratic party from a beltway Republican-Light party into one where the power flows from the bottom up and the party leaders recognize it. The stakes have never been higher, thanfully Laura is here to help show the way.

  • Rating Campaigns not Candidates  Jan 30, 2008 (12 of 12 found this helpful)

    Blue Grit is what the Democratic Party needs. It's a little bit like soul it's a lot like grits. Whether they get it or whether they will ever get it is another story.

    The story that Laura Flanders tells in her prescient book is one that the fourth estate--fawning over Barack Obama's rout in Iowa--would have been well advised to read. They might have learned a thing or two: That progressive movements are not built over night and that they are not built on the backs of candidates, no matter how inspiring they are. Flanders is not a conventional campaign correspondent--conventional campaign correspondents don't actually cover campaigns; they cover candidates--and that is why Blue Grit, which chronicles progressive change in unlikely places, is much more valuable than the daily dose (often mind numbing) of political reportage. For a good example, see Flanders' recent stories in the Nation magazine on why the current campaign is not about Obama and why the real battle is not between Obama and Clinton but between the suites (the penthouse party) and the streets.

    Flanders is more attuned to the people who make political change, often against great odds, than anyone else writing today. Thus her book is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the current moment, a field guide to a more promising political future.

    What is happening and what will happen in '08? As Flanders points out, the Democratic gains in '06 "didn't usher in new power for a new agenda." But the political shift is taking place at a different level. "The top of the ticket is not where the action is. Political change, as opposed to personnel change, works from the bottom up..." Will we see political change in the next election or just another changing of the guards?

  • Rating Ground Truth  Apr 14, 2007 (18 of 20 found this helpful)

    In this riveting new book, Laura Flanders defies the category of Non-Fiction. With the unflinching stories delivered from the mouths of this new 'purple' movement, and heard through the gorgeous prose style and poetic verse rendered on these pages, we feel real blue grit and new hope for social change in the United States. This book will upend the inaccurate perception that real bravery has abandoned the democrats. These new
    heroes are here, in the pages of this book, making critical alterations in the political and social landscape of the ongoing experiment that is still America. Laura Flanders delivers these voices to us at a perfect moment.
    It is moving, shocking, upsetting and inspiring, and will pave the way to a brand new way to make our social dreams come true. I'm standing in line for her next book.

  • Rating This American Life: Flanders is a Political Ira Glass  May 24, 2007 (8 of 8 found this helpful)

    I loved this book, I simply didn't want it to end. Another volume maybe, Laura?

    Flanders is a top-notch storyteller, social observer and enthusiastic cheerleader for progressive social change. Her style is refreshing and human; she's tough on all the right assholes, gentle with the good guys and emphatic as she bursts many a bubble of disinformation, misinformation and outright deception. But more than anything, her stories of the courage and committment of small "d" democratic activists across the country make you want to jump into the fray and make a difference in the ways her heroes did.

    It's easy living in a progressive city (Flanders reminds us that every metropolis with a population above 500k went for Kerry--take note DNC) to feel defeated by the inability to make real change that matters. For a year following the disastrous 2004 election, Flanders crossed the country, from New Orleans to Utah, from Montana to the Vegas Strip. And while the post-election pundits chastised the Democrats for not being mainstream and centrist enough, Flanders tells us the real decisive victories happened on the progressive left. In union halls. On Indian reservations. With young people. All of whom pounded the pavement to wrack up historic numbers in terms of voter registration and Democratic votes. And yet the Democratic Party infrastructure, ever the gang that couldn't shoot straight, under-appreciated, misunderstood and outright negated these victories time and time again. Flanders talks about the union rep who remarked that "Republicans reward their friends, Democrats reward their enemies."

    Flanders' frontline reportage is biting and witty, acerbic and generous. Here she is on the lack of grassroots infrastructure to support change long term: "What the [Democrats] built was a Penthouse Party: all top-floor suites, no load bearing walls, no foundations, no functioning stairway to the street." Time and time again she nails it. What I loved is that like Ira Glass on an episode of This American Life, you find the dramatic, detailed account of regular folks fighting the good fight inspiring and memorable. More, more, more.

  • Rating Finally, fun political writing as if people actually mattered  Apr 8, 2007 (13 of 15 found this helpful)

    I read a lot of political books and this one is fresh and special. In a media world where the big guys dominate (and usually get all the credit) Flanders puts her focus on the grassroots groups and ground-level activists whom she believes really do the work that changes this country. It couldn't be better timed, given the ground-up revolt that was the 2006 election and it's a lovely read. I read it in one shot, sad when it ended.
    As a not-very active Democratic voter who sometimes gets discouraged, it was helpful to be reminded that this isn't a blue vs. red country -- there are "blue grit" types everywhere. The book also reminded me that people really do have power if only we use it. The question is, will Democratic leaders listen? I'm going to be giving this book out at my church. A breath of fresh air, albeit pretty tough on party leaders.

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