Sirota Speaks to DPOC, Then Hits Bestseller List

Posted: June 12, 2008

The New York Times today announced that David Sirota’s new book, THE UPRISING, will appear on its upcoming nonfiction bestseller list for the week of June 12th. In just its first full week of release, the book will be listed at #20 on the Times’ bestseller list. 

Sirota recently spoke in Orange to an enthusiastic audience to benefit the Democratic Party of Orange County.

THE UPRISING follows Sirota’s New York Times bestseller Hostile Takeover (2006). It reports on today’s seething popular discontent on both the Right and Left, which is creating a new populist political movement roiling the 2008 presidential campaign and national politics. From behind-the-scenes meetings on Capitol Hill and an anti-war march with appearances by Jane Fonda and Sean Penn to an ExxonMobil stockholder meeting and the dusty campsite of the California Minutemen guarding the U.S.-Mexico border, Sirota traveled the United States to report on this anger and the populist uprising it is creating. One of the book’s key chapters focuses on efforts to unionize high-tech workers in the Pacific Northwest, through the eyes of the Washington Alliance of Technology Workers.

Of THE UPRISING, Publishers Weekly says Sirota “weaves entertaining case studies, keeping his tone conversational, the narrative fast-paced and the content accessible,” adding that “this book presents a rousing account of the local uprisings already in effect.”
In its review, The Washington Post said “The Uprising is a hard book to dislike or dismiss. Sirota reports cleverly and in pleasing detail about a complex world of political conflict that the journalistic throng obsessed with presidential candidates and their handlers seldom notices...Sirota may not have the Establishment quaking in its Guccis, but his always energetic, often ironic reporting certainly made the quest worthwhile.”

The book traces the historical roots of populism, from its start in the rural West and Midwest all the way to the present. It also explores the ongoing efforts to thwart populism, including a close look at the Democratic Party’s construction of the “superdelegate” system now playing a key role in the presidential campaign. THE UPRISING features exclusive reporting on icons across the political spectrum, from CNN’s Lou Dobbs, to Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer, to ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillorsen to Senate candidate Ned Lamont. It is all firsthand narrative over a year-long journey across the country, and shows why Molly Ivins hailed Sirota as “a new-generation populist who instinctively understands that the only real questions are ‘Who’s getting screwed’ and ‘Who’s doing the screwing?’”