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Phil Campbell - Grassroots: Politics . . . But Not as Usual

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This offbeat true story is a comedy and a tragedy about politics, from anti-globalist protest to domestic turmoil. Its about idealism, obsession and failure in Seattle, a progressive city on the fringe of Americas continent and consciousness. Grant Cogswell is a poet, a punk rock-fan, an anarchist, a grassroots activist, and one very temperamental character. He loves Seattle so much he has the city logo tattooed on his arm. In the summer of 2001 he decides to run for city council. Hes so determined to win that hell even wear a polar-bear suit to a city hall meeting. Phil Campbell, the author, is a burnt-out recently fired alt-weekly reporter, a manic depressive who sees few reasons to live. Inspired by his friend Grants passion, and without anything better to do, he agrees to manage Grants campaign. For eighteen weeks, Phil devotes himself to Grants grassroots challengeall the while fending an overzealous roommate challenging him for his position as manager of their shared house. Overshadowing the story is the tale of U.S. Rep. Marion Anthony Zioncheck, a legendary boozer and forgotten lefty radical from the 1930s. As Grants campaign unfolds, so does the story of Zionchecks tragedy his rise and fall from an energetic young politico to a madman who is sent to the insane asylum. The question: Is Zionchecks tale a lesson already learned, or a prophecy waiting to be repeated?

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Table of Contents Praise for Grassroots Previously Published as Zioncheck - photo 1
Table of Contents Praise for Grassroots Previously Published as Zioncheck - photo 2
Table of Contents

Praise for Grassroots
Previously Published as Zioncheck for President
Phil Campbell is a passionate sharp and truly hilarious writer He manages to - photo 3
Phil Campbell is a passionate, sharp, and truly hilarious writer. He manages to be moving and sincere while still finding the absurd humor in most situations. When I get his stuff, I tear through it. His book was a pleasure to read.
VICTOR LAVALLE, author of Big Machine and
winner of the 2010 American Book Award

Phil Campbell has written a hell of a book, a wild and tender campaign memoir that reads like a deadpan comic novel. Zioncheck for President is at once an ode to progressive politics, a hilarious study of nineties punk rock fallout, a call to arms for everybody... sick of the status quo, and a relentlessly amusing buddy tale about two young men filled with hope, dread and coffee who, against the instincts of their generation, try to make a difference in the American electoral circus.
SAM LIPSYTE, author of Home Land

Phil Campbells account of a lost local political campaign is smart, rueful, and relentlessly funny (his portrait of Seattle, with its piety and precipitation, is one of the best Ive ever encountered). Its also a reminder that all politics is not merely localits personal, too, in every sense of the word.
JAMES MARCUS, author of Amazonia
and Deputy Editor of Harpers

We live in a polarized Americaleft versus right, Democrat versus Republican, anarchist versus baristabut Phil Campbells suspenseful, funny, and refreshingly bitter account of the race for Seattle city council is enough to inspire anyone.
Mo Rocca

Phil Campbells Zioncheck for President is a blunt, hilarious assessment of an idealistic and ultimately ill-fated city council bid he managed. Highly recommended!
MAUD NEWTON

Excellent... a rare political book thats both genuinely sad and funny.... [Campbell] does a beautiful job of describing the political and cultural geography of 21st-century Seattle.... Read this book and get inspired.
Huffington Post

Campbell has written a mordantly funny account of the erosion of his youthful ideals.
The Chicago Reader

A fast-paced mix of memoir and gonzo reporting.
The Seattle Times

[Phil Campbells] incredibly candid portrait of idealism and disaffection as seen through the exploits of two young activists serves as a diagnosis for anyone struggling to reconcile individual efficacy with an indifferent world.
The Boston Globe

Campbell skillfully captures the tension, frustrations and small victories that serve as emotional mileposts on a campaign, and his running commentary on the city of Seattle and its neighborhoods and citizens give depth to the narrative.
Publishers Weekly

Seriously, go buy Phil Campbells Zioncheck for President, the only political book Ive read in years that didnt make me weep with frustration. He does a great job.... I know almost nothing about SeattleI can identify the Seahawks logo, and thats about itbut Campbell does a great job explaining how the political game is played in the city. It doesnt feel like a local book; the themes are universal, and anyone whos ever invested emotional energy in politics, whether local or national, can relate.
Bookslut

Zioncheck for President, by Phil Campbell, is one of the best books Ive read all year. The book, about an eccentric Seattle city-council race, perfectly captures the joys and frustrations of left-wing politics, yet unlike most lefty books, doesnt preach and doesnt leave you feeling hopeless. A truly fine nonfiction book that reads like a good novel. Check it out.
NEAL POLLACK

Zioncheck for President transcends a merely ironic tale of grassroots politics to provoke thought about history and its lessons.
Booklist

This is the perfect distillation of any political insiders memoir, and Campbells candor sets the book apart from those huge-advance national campaign bios.
The Stranger

Campbell skillfully illustrates the emotional rollercoaster of running a campaign, avoiding the minutiae of the administrative duties and treating the campaign as a living, breathing thing.
The Omaha Reader

[Zioncheck] may not sound like material for a minor little masterpiece... But the bookfunny, sad, serious, and illuminatingworks uncannily well on several levels, including one or two that I didnt know existed.... [Zioncheck] will give you goose bumps.
The Memphis Flyer
Book Notes
The story is true. There are some asides to this assertion, however.
My housemate Dougs name, physical description, and occupation have been changed. A number of early incidents involving Doug were moved slightly in time to fit the books narrative. Theresa, our first volunteer coordinator, does not go by that name.
Material about the Grant Cogswell campaign and other events in this book was supplemented by interviews from Grant, his volunteers, and some of my ex-housemates. The material relating to Marion Zioncheck came from a variety of historical sources. Numerous minor incidents involving the Grant Cogswell Campaign were shifted slightly in time (and occasionally in space) to accommodate the narrative structure of this book.
I may or may not have lived on Twenty-third Avenue East.
Grant Cogswell has given his full, if exceedingly nervous, cooperation for this book. One or two incidents, scenes, quotes, or actions involving Grant Cogswell were either fabricated or embellished to the point of falsity. This was done out of political loyalty rather than narrative necessity. If for any reason Grant needs to dismiss this book as a malicious pack of lies, hell be free to do so.
And you, you ridiculous people, you expect me to help you.
Denis Johnson, Jesus Son
This book is dedicated to my parents.
May they not believe a word of it.
Preface
August 1936

U.S. Representative Marion Anthony Zioncheck looked out his office window and down at the swelling, shifting throng that had gathered in his name and wondered if he was going mad. Thousands of people crowded the streets of downtown Seattle, cheering with a fierce, throaty conviction. TheyHooverville tramps holding communist tracts and wearing rags that were more mud than material; penniless Japanese flophouse managers from Skid Road; square-jawed sailors on leave in their windcheater jackets; hardbitten Scandinavian loggers; even a few sympathetic middle-aged rich women who were trying too hard to look like Jean Harlowshouldered against each other, slid down the hilly sidewalks, climbed light poles, and carried on as if they had all just stumbled out of a bar.
Hulet? Zioncheck said. Is the rumor trueis there another strike? Do they want me to give a speech? But Hulet Wellsfriend, roommate, and legislative aidewasnt there, having abandoned him a few months before over a situation Zioncheck could only characterize as a lack of faith. The congressman felt a sadness when he recalled this. Oh, forget you, then, he told the empty room.
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