Equal parts revealing memoir, valuable historical document, and galvanizing guide to following ones beliefs. Publishers Weekly, PW Editor's Pick!!
Kurshans Levitating the Pentagon is a brilliant endeavor. Its a unique history of the period we call the Sixties . . . and Nancy Kurshan continues to be engaged in radical left politics to this day . . .It seems almost trite to write these final words of this review, but, at the same time, it seems entirely appropriate: Nancy Kurshan, live like her! Ron Jacobs, Counterpunch
This book is a blueprint for todays activists, and a reminder that a life guided by conscience and action is a life well led. Just do it! READ THIS BOOK! Clara Bingham, author, The Movement
Levitating the Pentagon not only makes the past present . . . but it also clarifies the need for people committed to the values that informed the leftism and feminism of that not-too-distant past. Eve Ottenberg, Counterpunch
A radical revisits the turbulent 1960s and early 70s. . . . A useful addition to the history of the New Left. Kirkus Reviews
With passion, insight, and humor, Nancys narrative invites us to think critically about the successes and failures of her generations aspirations for liberation. Her feminist sensibility infuses her understanding of both systemic oppression as well as its reproduction within activist struggles for equality. For those who share her history as well as others for whom this is an introduction into American left political culture, this memoir is an essential and special treat. Nancy Caro Hollander, author, Uprooted Minds: A Social Psychoanalysis for Precarious Times
[ Nancy Kurshan] belongs in the pantheon of the American left along with Emma Goldman and Mother Jones. She is wrong when she writes, I am not exceptional. You are exceptional, Nancy; your memoir is also exceptional and outstanding. . . . When Im asked to recommend a book about the American left over the past 60 or so years, I will suggest readers turn to Levitating the Pentagon. Jonah Raskin, The Rag Blog
"Levitating the Pentagon is no manifesto. Its an unpretentious first-person account of American radical activism in the second half of the twentieth century. And in my view, we can always use more of that. Peter Richardson, author, Savage Journey
"When we fight, we win, at least some of the time. Other times, it seems like we might have lostuntil we look back and realize that our actions were part of a crescendo that ultimately sparked change. Through an extraordinary combination of humor, reflection and political analysis, Levitating the Pentagon shows us both. Nancy Kurshan details the many David-vs-Goliath type movements battling injustices across six decades. At the same time, she also chronicles the quiet, unsexy, and often unrecognized work of herself and many other women in sustaining those struggles--and pushing towards victory." Victoria Law, journalist; author, Corridors of Contagion: How the Pandemic Exposed the Cruelties of Incarceration
If the idea of levitating the Pentagon sounds absurd now, it wasnt nearly as insane as the mass slaughter of peasants in Vietnam, the generals inside that haunted building were orchestrating. Absurdity was, and remains, the weapon of choice against madness. Kurshans provocative and spirited book is a reflection of how she has lived her radical life in the Sixties and ever since: humane, fearless and, even after all these perilous years, still charged with a luminous faith that a more just future is possible. Jeffrey St. Clair, editor, CounterPunch; author, Born Under a Bad Sky
Hers is no ordinary voice. It outs the secretspolitical and personalthat barred women from leadership roles and kept them confined to scut work and sexism. But Kurshan does so not only with an honest voice and perceptive eye, but with a compassionate heart. For readers still trying to figure out what the new left was about, this is THE book to read. Robin Morgan, Author, Activist
In her candid, unvarnished and revealing memoir, Nancy Kurshan tells us what it was like to be an idealist of the 60s whose political activism shunned the drift into the mainstream and careerism. Beginning with the hijinks of the Yippies, as the partner of Jerry Rubin, she navigates the trial of the Chicago 7 and then, post Rubin, the movements against the Vietnam War and racism, a personal dawning of feminism, the radical call of the Weather Underground Organization and finally, with her husband, the fight for prison reform. Its a tale of sacrifice and squabbles, fulfillments and failures, and at the end the satisfaction of a lifetime of combating injustice. John Darnton, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist; author, Neanderthal
Nancy Kurshans memoir will inspire you to do more and to do it better. To take risks, and also to reflect. To assume responsibility for what is being done in our names. To act up and speak out in these treacherous and urgent times. Buy or borrow or Steal this Book! Bernardine Dohrn, Founder, The Children and Family Justice Center, School of Law, Northwestern University
Nancy Kurshans memoir is a true gift. . . . Without succumbing to protagonism, Nancy tells us about her activism, her commitment to radical change for the liberation of humanity, to the building of a world where there are no oppressors and no oppressed and where the people themselves are the leaders of their own freedom. José E. López, Executive Director of the Puerto Rican Cultural Center, Chicago