Food & Drink

Seattle Group and Third Place Books Send Congress Members Book About 20th Century Tyranny

An anonymous crew of South Seattleites wants Congress to heed lessons from the past.

By Alexa Peters December 18, 2017

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A few weeks ago, Kim Hooyboer, manager of Third Place Books in Seward Park, got a call from a group of concerned citizens. Inspired by Yale history professor Timothy Snyder’s book On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons From the Twentieth Century, these locals came to the independent bookstore with a bold proposition: help us send a copy of this text to every member of Congress.

The response from Hooyboer and her bosses was enthusiastic. Third Place Books offered the group, who asked to remain anonymous to emphasize the community effort, a significant discount on more than half the books needed, plus space to write personalized letters and stuff envelopes. A friend of the group who lives in Vermont connected them with Vermont Book Shop, which is contributing the other half of the books.

“How we can be active resistance hubs: I’ve been talking about this with a lot of other bookstores around the country in the last year,” said Hooyboer. “Our role as booksellers is to bring the right books to the right people at the right time. To be principled, not partisan. That’s why it makes so much sense for this group to come to us and for us to help in whatever way we can.”

A New York Times Bestseller, On Tyranny has been an inspiration to more than just this South Seattle crew. Two East Coast women, Rhoda Isaacs and Judith Hochman, recently wrote an editorial for The Washington Post about their own fundraising effort to send On Tyranny to Congress.

Hooyboer says this campaign is unrelated to the Seward Park community’s project, but that she’s not surprised others have been emboldened by the text. After all, Washington Post book reviewer Carlos Lozada went as far as saying On Tyranny is only slightly less vital” than the United States Constitution itself.

“I think [people’s enthusiasm] really just has a lot to do with the importance of Snyder’s work,” Hooyboer said. “It really traces back the roots of how we’ve gotten to tyrannical administrations in the past, and it [underscores] why seeing that play out in the present is so terrifying. It’s really a historically-focused text, and I think that’s why it creates such an impact for people.”

Accordingly, anonymous statements from the Seward Park group elucidated how On Tyranny showed them how similar the actions of the current administration are to actions of past tyrannical regimes.

 “Every day, I turn on the news and learn about some new disaster that Trump has created, or some new freedom, or land, or qualified government employee that has been taken away from American citizens,” said one member. “It is clear by the caliber of people Trump is putting in charge and the freedoms that his administration keeps taking from us, that their intent is to create either total chaos, or a dictatorship, and that scares me.

“Reading the book On Tyranny, I found ways I can prepare myself, ways I can resist. I found it so relevant that I thought every member of Congress should read this. … We hope they will take the time to read the book and find new ways to protect our government and our citizens.” 

Last Thursday, the group convened downstairs at Third Place Books Seward Park to write personal letters for the book mailing. Hooyboer, originally from Colorado, joined them to write to Colorado representatives. The books will be sent in batches throughout the week so that they will be waiting for Congress members when they return from holiday recess January 4.

Though the group wanted to keep the letter writing and shipment more intimate, they are urging others to send handwritten postcards to members of Congress. The group has set aside funds for the postage.

“The postcards are open for any appeals to Congress members, though we’re encouraging folks to use On Tyranny as a point of reference and, perhaps, to encourage Congress members to read the copy of the book that they will be receiving,” said Hooyboer.

Postcards can be dropped off at Third Place Books Seward Park by January 1. A selection of activist postcards from local artists Orange Twist are available for purchase at the store.

“I think it’s really easy right now to want to close the doors, turn the lights off, and sit in a corner, but one of the important things we can be doing right now is educating ourselves and reading these books and having these conversations with your community,” Hooyboer said.

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