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United We Stand Divided We Fall: Opposing Trump's Agenda: Essays On Protest And Resistance And What We Can Do To Stop Him Paperback – March 31, 2017
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In United We Stand Divided We Fall Garn Press has gathered together essays by great scholars and renowned teachers who oppose the direction in which President Trump is leading the country. These are essays, to quote George Lakoff, which frame American values accurately and systemically day after day, telling truths by American majority moral values.
These are essays of protest against and resistance to Trump’s presidency, to his billionaire cabinet, to the privileging in the White House of white supremacists, the promulgation of “alternate facts”, the denigration of media sources, the purges of State Department personnel, the gag orders at the EPA and scientists placed on “watch lists”, the travel bans on people from wide swaths of U.S. society and on refugees … the list is long.
They are also essays that tackle the question of what we can do to stop Trump from becoming a fast moving catastrophe. When the hands of the Doomsday Clock were moved closer to midnight, President Trump was named specifically as an existential risk to humanity. There is no doubt that we must all act. The writers of conscience who have written this collection of essays are all actively engaged in opposing President Trump and their writings encourage us to participate in the resistance movement. Read with a pencil in hand. Make notes on what you can do to join aspects of the movement that reflects the needs and concerns of your community. Through social media you can go global while acting locally.
- Print length192 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateMarch 31, 2017
- Dimensions6 x 0.44 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101942146574
- ISBN-13978-1942146575
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Product details
- Publisher : Garn Press
- Publication date : March 31, 2017
- Language : English
- Print length : 192 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1942146574
- ISBN-13 : 978-1942146575
- Item Weight : 9.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.44 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,796,719 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #614 in Media & Internet in Politics (Books)
- #1,165 in Political Corruption & Misconduct
- #3,076 in Democracy (Books)
About the authors

Denny Taylor is the founder and CEO of Garn Press.
Taylor regards art, literature, and science inseparable. She is a lifelong activist and scholar committed to nurturing the imagination and human spirit. She has published sixteen books, is the recipient of the Modern Language of Association of America Mina P. Shaughnessy Award, and has been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. In 2004 she was inducted in the International Literacy Association's Reading Hall of Fame.
She is Professor Emeritus of Literacy Studies at Hofstra University, and the founder of Garn Press. Her most recent books are Nineteen Clues: Great Transformations Can Be Achieved Through Collective Action; Save Our Children, Save Our School: Pearson Broke The Golden Rule; Rosie’s Umbrella, and Rat-a-tat-tat! I’ve Lost My Cat!
And her new novel, Split Second Solution, is an urban dystopian fantasy set in Louisiana and New York City.

P. L. Thomas, Professor of Education (Furman University, Greenville SC), taught high school English in rural South Carolina before moving to teacher education. He is a former column editor for English Journal (National Council of Teachers of English), current series editor for Critical Literacy Teaching Series: Challenging Authors and Genres (Brill/Sense Publishers), and author of Teaching Writing as Journey, Not Destination: Essays Exploring What ‘Teaching Writing’ Means (IAP). NCTE named Thomas the 2013 George Orwell Award winner. Recent edited volumes include Haruki Murakami: Challenging authors (Sense, 2016) and Critical Media Literacy and Fake News in Post-Truth America (Brill/Sense, 2018). His teaching and scholarship focus on literacy and the impact of poverty and race on education, as well as confronting the political dynamics influencing public education in the U.S. Follow his work @plthomasEdD and the becoming radical (http://radicalscholarship.wordpress.com/).

Born in New York City, Kolb has lived mostly in the Midwest, serving as editorial page editor, city hall reporter and police reporter for newspapers there for more than a quarter-century.
His freelance work has also appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post and The International Herald Tribune among other publications. He is currently co-publisher and co-editor, and a columnist for, a progressive political newsletter “dedicated to turning West Michigan blue.”
The writer’s journalism has earned him high praise from readers and editors alike, and has garnered for Kolb numerous first-place writing awards from the Associated Press, United Press International, Michigan Press Association and the American Legion.
In 1996, Kolb was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for A World War Chronicle, a local interest book based on a six-year collection of his editorials and reporting on the 50th anniversary of World War II, and on West Michigan’s involvement in that titanic struggle.
As an Ohio University undergraduate, Kolb studied English literature and creative writing as a student of the late Walter Tevis, acclaimed novelist and short story writer, author of The Hustler and other works.
Kolb lives with his wife Maxine and works from their home in Grand Haven, MI, where he is writing his next novel.

Steve Nelson has been Head of School at the Calhoun School, on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, since 1998. Calhoun is one of America’s most notable progressive schools and serves 750 students, from pre-Kindergarten through 12th grade. Calhoun is particularly well regarded for its commitment to diversity and social justice.
Since 1997 Steve has been a columnist for the Valley News, the daily newspaper in the mid-VT/NH area on both sides of the Connecticut River. He has been a regular contributor to the Huffington Post since 2010, writing about education and politics. Before assuming his current position, he worked as an administrator at Vermont Law School and Landmark College. He is an avid violinist and also served for six years as President of a performing arts school in the Midwest.
Steve has competed in many marathons, triathlons, bicycle races and XC ski races, with steadily decreasing success. He now primarily races the grim reaper.
He is married to Wendy Nelson, has two children, Jennifer and Christopher, and three perfect grandchildren – Quinn, Maddie and Jack.

Carolyn Walker began her creative nonfiction writing career as a columnist for The Clarkston News, her small town newspaper, where she learned the importance of writing about "every day people". Every day people, she believes, contain the world's best secrets. She has grown from there to become an award winning writer of memoir, essays, and poetry. Carolyn's writing has been published in several literary journals, such as The Southern Review and Crazyhorse, as well as numerous magazines and newspapers. She has a Master of Fine Arts degree in Writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She is also a Kresge Fellow in the Literary Arts. Every Least Sparrow is her story of raising a daughter with a rare disability, called Rubinstein-Taybi Syndrome.
5 Star Review By Divine Zape for Readers’ Favorite
Every Least Sparrow by Carolyn Walker is a memoir that every mother should read. As a mother, I have always believed that every child is special, that is, every child comes with a blessing and a curse, and that the curse is the part of the child that brings out the motherhood in us. This memoir has taught me many lessons. Carolyn Walker finds out that her new-born baby girl has a rare syndrome, the Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome — and I am, like the mother, learning about it only in this book — a condition that affects her mental and physical abilities negatively, or so everyone thinks. One could imagine her anxiety, the worry that suddenly takes hold of her heart. This book chronicles her journey with her daughter and her desperate search for a cure. It is wonderful to read how she meets with professionals, travels from one part of the country to another, searching for what is buried inside her heart. She discovered patient love as she needed to find the best time to engage with her daughter, accompany her as she learned skills late, like using the toilet. What this journey did to Jennifer is as wonderful as the transformation happening in the heart of her mother.
Carolyn Walker’s memoir is really heartwarming and there is no better way of describing her journey than using the term “awakening.” Her experience of living with her daughter and tending to her family has provoked a spiritual growth in her. Readers will love Jennifer and watching her as she evolves in the story. Every Least Sparrow had a lot to teach me and one of the wonderful lessons that caught my attention is this: No matter the depth of our pain, of our frustration and worry, it becomes less when we allow love to take hold of our heart. Jennifer found solace and a wonderful place to grow in the love of her parents. One can’t read this memoir without giggling happily at times, feeling tears run down their face, or occasionally being seized by a wave of powerful emotions. It was such an inspiration. A beautiful story simply told and a powerful message of love and hope, with lessons for everyone.
Some beautiful words from a Canadian reader:
I met Clarkston, Michigan writer, Carolyn Walker, at the Vermont Studio Center, a divine artists’ colony. Both of us mothers and writers, we were working on memoirs of our special-needs children, who are radically different from each other. Carolyn’s daughter, Jennifer, the subject of Every Least Sparrow, has a rare and exquisitely complex condition called Rubinstein-Taybi Syndrome involving severe physical and mental disabilities. My adopted son is physically “normal” and not “retarded,” the word Carolyn uses. Instead, he has an exquisitely complex neuro-psych profile and concurrent disorders that express in self-sabotage and antisocial behaviour.
Given these wildly different profiles, you might think Carolyn and I wouldn’t have much in common. In fact, we belong (to) the same sisterhood: fiercely loving mothers with children whose extraordinary needs swallow us whole. We walk over hot coals to give our kids a fighting chance. It is precisely this connection between us that will endear her excellent book to every parent raising a very different child, no matter the diagnoses.
That said, this memoir is especially meaningful to parents of children with rare syndromes, who rarely see their journey reflected in literature. The shock of realizing something is terribly wrong. The agonizing struggle to figure out what it is. The hospital’s revolving door. The specialists’ shuffle. Poor Jennifer, now an adult, has had more doctor visits and risky surgeries than you can count. And she has endured them with dignity.
As well, the book is a valuable resource for doctors and specialists intimately involved with these kids and their families. In Jennifer’s case, some of the medical professionals who treat her, earn high praise. Others, not so much.
Every Least Sparrow achieves something far beyond the disability story at its core. It brings an individual to life. We meet Jennifer as a person, much more than the aggregate of her peculiar looks with beak nose, sloping eyes and jointless thumbs. We see Jennifer obsessing about the movie, Titanic, and Celine Dion’s theme song. In the chapter entitled Lovebird, she plays the flirt with a couple of boyfriends. Indeed, these intensely bittersweet pages had me laughing and crying.
Carolyn’s gifts as a writer, and her devotion as a mother, is guaranteed to do the same for you.

Steven Singer is an 8th grade Language Arts teacher in western Pennsylvania. He is a Nationally Board Certified Teacher and has an MAT from the University of Pittsburgh. He is Director of the Research and Blogging Committee for the Badass Teachers Association. He is co-founder of the Pennsylvania-based education budget advocacy group T.E.A.C.H. (Tell Everyone All Cuts Hurt). He ran a successful campaign through Moveon.org against the since repealed Voter ID law in the Keystone State. He joined United Opt Out as an administrator in 2016. He is a member of the Education Bloggers Network. His writing on education and civil rights issues has appeared in the Washington Post, Education Week, the LA Progressive, Commondreams.org, Portside Navigator and has been featured on Diane Ravitch’s Site. He blogs at gadflyonthewallblog.wordpress.com.





