BOOKS

Books


The Verso Book of Feminism

Revolutionary Words from Four Millennia of Rebellion

Edited by Jessie Kindig

Verso Books | October 2020

An unprecedented collection of feminist voices from 2300 BCE to the present.

“A perfect bedside book for feminists. A commonplace book that is anything but commonplace.”

– Alix Kates Shulman


Ebooks


We Organize to Change Everything:

Fighting for Abortion Access and Reproductive Justice

Edited by Natalie Adler, Marian Jones, Jessie Kindig, Elizabeth Navarro, and Anne Rumberger

Verso Books and Lux Magazine | June 2022

A collaboration between acclaimed socialist feminist magazine Lux and Verso, We Organize to Change Everything analyzes the loss of Roe v. Wade, explores struggles to provide abortion from Mississippi to Mexico, and debates how we can rebuild a fighting movement for reproductive justice—whether it’s illegal or not.


Property Will Cost Us the Earth:

Direct Action and the Future of the Global Climate Movement

Edited by Jessie Kindig, with an introduction by Andreas Malm

Verso Books | April 2022

Following on Andreas Malm’s controversial best-seller How to Blow Up a Pipeline, this collection grapples with the idea of direct action and eco-sabotage, surveys climate activism around the world, and argues for the necessity of building a fighting global movement against capitalism and its fossil fuel regime.


There Is No Outside: Covid-19 Dispatches

Edited by Jessie Kindig, Mark Krotov, and Marco Roth

Verso Books and n+1 | May 2020


A collaboration between the renowned magazine of literature and politics, n+1, and Verso Books, this essay collection tracks the course of Covid-19 across the circuits of global capital to New York’s prisons and emergency rooms, Los Angeles’s homeless encampments, and the migrant camps in Greece; and into the intimate spaces of our homes, our ideas of how to live, and into our bodies and cells.


Where Freedom Starts: Sex Power Violence #MeToo

Edited by Jessie Kindig

Verso Books | February 2018

The powerful wave of rage fueling #MeToo has finally refocused public attention on sexual harassment and sexual violence and starkly posed questions of power, of feminism, and of politics. In short, this moment has recalled a much older question: how do we get free? In this collection of new and previously published writings, leading activists, feminists, scholars, and writers describe the shape of the problem, chart the forms refusal has taken, and outline a freedom that is more than notional, but embodied and uncompromising.