cover image The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear

The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear

. Basic Books, $16.95 (422pp) ISBN 978-0-465-04166-4

In this uneven collection, Loeb, author of Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time, gathers together over sixty poems, memoirs and essays tailored to buck up the spirits of a left-liberal audience depressed by the sorry state of the world. Although generally in favor of justice and democracy and against the""runaway global market,"" the selection of writers includes a wide range of environmentalists, civil rights crusaders, anti-poverty activists and dissidents against both fascism and communism. From these eclectic offerings some hopeful, albeit familiar themes assert themselves: ordinary people can make a difference, every little bit counts, in solidarity there is strength, a positive attitude is half the battle, the powers that be are unexpectedly vulnerable, and history is full of surprising victories of the weak over the strong. Not surprisingly, many of the pieces amount to motivational lectures, while others inflate the notion of hope into tiresome dilations on, for example, the links between information processing, daydreams and butterflies. But the articles that deal with concrete struggles and achievements--Nelson Mandela's memoir of imprisonment on Robben Island, Vaclav Havel's account of the ant-like construction of civil society and a dissident political culture in Communist Czechoslovakia, Bill McKibben's homage to the urban planning triumphs of Curitiba, Brazil--deliver real inspiration.