What is the meaning of darkness and struggle? What is the light that we all seek - in politics as in our personal lives? In the shared life of democracy, we need each others stories of perseverance.
Eighteen writers respond to the challenge of upholding basic values in a time when our politics seem to have become weird, scary, and undemocratic. Personal stories and reflections weave a wary kind of hopefulness: no darkness lasts forever.
Moments on a hiking trail, a funeral, or a voyage at sea - family histories and personal credos -show how we have always had to measure our lives in resolve and in realism, and not yield either to fantasy or despair. Includes essays by David Oates, Tina Tau, John Brantingham, Andy Smart, Heidi Beierle, Bess Bacall, Kamala Bremer, Sonya Huber, Alison Towle Moore, Jill Elliott, Lois Ruskai Melina, Mare Hake, Seth Michael White, Leah Stenson, Rachael Duke, Diane Josefowiczm, and Edward Wolf. Poems by Jeremy Cantor, Eleanor Berry, Maria James-Thiaw, Marilyn Johnston, Suzy Harris, Annie Lightfoot, and Paulann Petersen.
About the Author
ALISON TOWLE MOORE spent the first half of life working in nonprofits, local government and philanthropy. She then earned an MFA in Writing. She lives in Portland, Oregon with her husband where she uses writing to explore how we think, behave and evolve.