This is a cool book. With its bold red cover and page edges, its quality paper and binding, with its grandiose title, The Book of Dissent feels important. And cool.
It feels like it should be the MacGuffin in an adventure story.
Two groups are searching the globe for this mysterious book, which has the power to ignite revolution wherever it is read. There's a ragtag band of rebels, from various backgrounds and championing different causes - they want to find the book to use its power to help them overthrow the corrupt establishment and bring about a better world. And the other group? The agents of the established order, who want to find the book and destroy it forever, so the status quo can never change. The adventure carries the groups across the world, as they trace the passage of The Book of Dissent through 3000 years of history.
They discover that the book appears to select people throughout history. It calls to them, until they find its resting place, it inspires for them for a while... and it grows. For when the one who holds The Book of Dissent dies, their voice, their dissent, is added to its pages, to forever cry out against injustice and call for a better world.
In the final confrontation, the Establishment Agents have found the current bookbearer; they have a gun to his head. The rebels arrive too late; they are stopped on entry, held to the ground by the agents.
The bookbearer's apartment is searched; the Book is found.
The villainous leader cackles first maniacally, then joyfully - for he knows without dissent then the happy life he and his elite friends have can continue forever.
He tosses The Book of Dissent into the fireplace.
The rebels cry.
It is now the bookbearer's time to laugh: he laughs loud and proud.
"You were a few minutes too late," he tells the agents. "I transcribed and uploaded it all. The Book is now all over the Internet."
Fade.
As the credits begin there is an extended epilogue showing a montage of protests, riots, and revolutions across the world.
Anyway.
The Book of Dissent that we have here is an anthology of dissenting voices spanning over 3000 years of history, although that history is very biased towards more recent centuries, when dissent was better recorded.
After 12 pages you've gone from 1800BC to 1000AD. Another 4 pages and you're into the 1500s AD. Another 4, 1600s. Another 7, 1700s. Another 13, 1800s. The remaining 300 pages are devoted to rebels from 1800 to the present day.
Each piece in this anthology is very short, most are less than a page, some are only 1 or 2 lines. Each is accompanied by a very short biography of the rebel being quoted.
It is very interesting and very diverse, in terms of where the rebels are from and the causes they are fighting for - racism, colonialism, imperialism, fascism, Stalinism, feminism, police brutality, inequality, oppression, gay rights, civil rights, trans rights, Internet freedom, etc. It is, however, published by Verso, so it is naturally biased to the political left - there are few rightwing rebels here!
It's not a book I could sit and read for long stretches. It's a dip-into-for-a-minute-or-so book, which unfortunately does not match by reading pattern, so it took me nearly a full 11 months to finish this. Not that I read some of it every week, or even every month.
But it is a cool book. Worth checking out.