Authors: The Rev. Dr Liz Theoharis & Noam Sandweiss-Back
Beacon Press, April 8, 2025 (available for pre-order now)
Buy indie: Bookshop.org
We are living in a gilded age of poverty amid plenty. In one of the wealthiest countries in the world, 40 million people live below the official poverty line and another 100 million people are one emergency away from economic ruin. But it doesn’t have to be this way.
In You Only Get What You’re Organized to Take, Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, one of the nation’s leading anti-poverty organizers and moral voices, and her co-author, Noam Sandweiss-Back, argue it is possible to abolish poverty. But this won’t happen through the goodwill of the powerful or the charitable actions of well-meaning people alone. It will happen through a mass movement, open to all, and led by the poor themselves.
Weaving together threads of history, theology, political analysis, and more, Theoharis traces her own journey through some of the most significant anti-poverty struggles of the past 30 years. Along the way, she and Sandweiss-Back introduce readers to the unsung heroes leading the movement to end poverty:
- Unhoused people seizing empty homes;
- Mothers on welfare going toe-to-toe with cutthroat politicians;
- Farmworkers taking down slavery rings;
- Backcountry clergy beating back the flames of Christian nationalism;
- Water protectors resisting the poisoning of their communities;
- And other modern-day prophets forging unlikely alliances to pray, sing, and organize their way toward freedom.
As the forces of extremism clamor with increasing fury, this book is an urgent reminder that poor people are not condemned to be subjects of history. Indeed, to reorient our society around the needs of all and reinvigorate the promise of democracy, the poor can and must become the architects of a new America.
The Reverend Dr. Liz Theoharis is an anti-poverty activist, pastor, theologian, and author. She is the executive director of the Kairos Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice and co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival. Rev. Dr. Theoharis has been organizing in poor and low-income communities for the past thirty-plus years.
Noam Sandweiss-Back is an organizer and a writer born in Jerusalem and raised in New Jersey. He has spent a decade organizing among the poor and dispossessed, including with the Kairos Center and the Poor People’s Campaign.
“We face a confluence of unprecedented crises today, none greater than ever-widening inequality and the poverty that is its stain. There are no easy answers to their resolution, but the hard work of organizing, movement building, and solidarity give us a fighting chance. We don’t need to reinvent the wheel, but we can learn the lessons from other struggles and the organizers who helped to shape them. You Only Get What You’re Organized to Take is the book we need for the moment we are in right now.”
—Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, author, From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation
“Through long study in the ‘University of the Poor,’ working alongside communities of poor and dispossessed people, my sister Liz has developed a unique capacity to articulate the shared wisdom of an organizing tradition that has been overlooked by most journalists and scholars. You Only Get What You’re Organized to Take is an essential addition to the movement literature of our time. It should be read by anyone who wants to know how we can not only save democracy but finally achieve what I call a democracy worth saving.”
—William J. Barber II, author of White Poverty: How Exposing Myths About Race and Class Can Reconstruct American Democracy
“Part memoir, part political history, part moral polemic—this book arrives at a critical time for our nation. Liz Theoharis and Noam Sandweiss-Back have crafted an ode to the often-dismissed power of poor and working-class people. These pages are filled with wisdom and strategy on what it will take to end poverty and build a more just and humane society. You Only Get What You’re Organized to Take is a must-have for every organizer interested in building big, durable, coalitions that materially change the lives of the poor and working class.”
—Maurice Mitchell, national director, Working Families Party
“I’ve been waiting for this book for a long time. Theoharis and Sandweiss-Back brilliantly remind us what’s possible when the disinherited of our nation overcome the politics of divide-and-conquer to take bold and united action together. In these pages, you’ll find not only the plight of the poor – so often swept under the rug in our society – but also their courageous fight and visionary insight.”
—Willie Baptist, author of Pedagogy of the Poor and It’s Not Enough to Be Angry
This beautiful book is the world turned upside down in the best of ways, a crucial reminder in times when coercive state power is growing frighteningly that the most potent and meaningful visions of change and actions for justice spring from the grass roots. Theoharis and Sandweiss-Back have written an evocative, inspiring history of recent poor people’s movements for food, shelter and dignity. Saluting solidarity as the font of hope, they offer us just what we need to be able to get out of bed each morning ready to continue the work of tikkun olam – repairing a broken world.
—Annelise Orleck, author of We Are All Fast Food Workers Now: The Global Uprising Against Poverty Wages and Storming Caesars’ Palace: How Black Mothers Fought Their Own War on Poverty.
“This book is a must-read for today’s changemakers and organizers. Examining stories of courageous, creative movements, it teaches us how others have tried to create change by building solidarity. You’ll come away with new ideas and renewed hope that, together, creating change is possible.”
—Sara Nelson, president, Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, AFL-CIO