
If We Burn: The Mass Protest Decade and the Missing Revolution
'as good as journalism gets'
$26.04
- Paperback
352 pages
- Release Date
16 March 2026
Summary
If We Burn: A Decade of Mass Protest and the Unfulfilled Revolution
This book is phenomenal … It’s about as good as journalism gets …The highest praise I can give If We Burn is to say that it would be criminally negligent not to read it if you’d like to change the world. - ROB DELANEY
Bevins’s clear-eyed, sympathetic account of the unfulfilled promise of these protests leaves his reader with a bold visi…
Book Details
ISBN-13: | 9781035412310 |
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ISBN-10: | 1035412314 |
Author: | Vincent Bevins |
Publisher: | Headline Publishing Group |
Imprint: | Wildfire |
Format: | Paperback |
Number of Pages: | 352 |
Release Date: | 16 March 2026 |
Weight: | 0g |
Dimensions: | 198mm x 129mm |
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Critics Review
This book is phenomenal. A thrilling, blow by blow (and often live on-the-ground) analysis of how the various people-led movements and revolutions over the last decade succeeded or failed. Incalculably useful to anyone who’d like to make substantive, enduring changes to their town, country or even the world. It’s an incredible follow up to The Jakarta Method - which focused on the development of the CIA and the seismic and often horrific global consequences - and sees Bevins applying his near-heroic methods of investigation to more recent events. It’s about as good as journalism gets and Bevins is uniquely positioned to get the goods, just due to the sheer amount of time he spends in the places he writes about, fostering relationships and suffering from unquenchable curiosity. I cannot think of a book that so soberly and forensically analysed the very recent past and looked at what went right and what went terribly wrong. The highest praise I can give If We Burn is to say that it would be criminally negligent not to read it if you’d like to change the world. And why wouldn’t you? – Rob Delaney, author of A Heart that WorksThe best book I read this year. – Eamon Whalen * Mother Jones *In this remarkably assured and sweeping history of the present, Vincent Bevins asks some of the most urgent questions for contemporary life: How can a multitude of ardent, angry, and hopeful people harness their energies for profound political change? And what happens if they fail? If We Burn travels the world in search of an answer and, along the way, introduces us to the activists, hackers, punks, martyrs, and the millions of ordinary people whose spontaneous acts of bravery spurred the mass protests of the last decade. Bevins’s clear-eyed, sympathetic account of the unfulfilled promise of these protests leaves his reader with a bold vision of the future - one in which his book’s lessons are used to transform an uprising into a true revolution. – Merve Emre, Wesleyan University, critic for The New Yorker
This book is outstanding.
– Benjamin Moser, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of SontagVincent Bevins’ compelling new book, If We Burn, is a wondrous work of mystery writing, an effort to solve the riddle: why has a decade of large-scale rolling revolts produced no revolution, no significant structural reform? I can’t think of any journalist other than Bevins who would dare to ask such a question, or be capable of weaving together seemingly discrete global events into a stunning history of now. Have we planted seeds for a better future or have the gears of change frozen for good? Bevins lets the people he talked to, those on the street, answer. – Greg Grandin, Pulitzer-Prize winning author of The End of the MythCrucially, the book draws deeply on protestors’ own words. If We Burn thereby offers both a postmortem of the last decade of mass protest and a blueprint for the inevitable next. In searching for the missing revolution, Bevins may help others find it after all. * Los Angeles Review of Books *The critically acclaimed Jakarta Method was a scathing exposé of the central role the C.I.A. played in orchestrating Indonesia’s savage 1965 anti-communist pogrom. If We Burn is both more ambitious and more wide-ranging. * New York Times Book Review *Tremendous. – Ryan Grim * The Intercept *Vincent Bevins emerged as a leading chronicler of US empire in his 2020 book The Jakarta Method, in which he explored the dirty legacy of the Cold War. His new book, If We Burn, is more personal and even more urgent. And somehow, a little hopeful, too.
– Jonathan Guyer * Vox *A riveting, almost novelistic narrative.
* Dazed *Bevins has spent the last 10 years or so following and interviewing in search of answers. ‘The point was not just to notice that the mass protest decade hasn’t really worked out,’ he muses toward the end of the book. ‘The idea was to understand why.’ Fortunately, he comes away from his globe-trotting search with critical lessons for activists both here and abroad. * The New Republic *About The Author
Vincent Bevins
Vincent Bevins is an award-winning journalist and correspondent. He covered Southeast Asia for the Washington Post, reporting from across the region and paying special attention to the legacy of the 1965 massacre. He previously served as the Brazil Correspondent for the Los Angeles Times, also covering nearby parts of South America, and before that worked for the Financial Times in London.
Among the other publications he has written for are the New York Times, Atlantic, Economist, Guardian, Foreign Policy, New York Review of Books, Folha de S.Paulo, New Republic, New Inquiry, Awl, Baffler and New York Magazine. Born and raised in California, Bevins now speaks Spanish, Portuguese, Indonesian and basic German, and spent the last few years living in Jakarta.
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