Declare Yourself: Speak. Connect. Act.
Vote. - More Than 50 Celebrated
Americans Tell You why
by Various Authors

    DECLARE YOURSELF by Various Authors
    Category:  Non-Fiction
    Age Recommendation:  Grades 9+
    Release Date:  5/20/08
    Publisher:  Greenwillow
    Reviewed by:  Candace Cunard
    Rating:  4 Stars


    This book, directed at teens on the edge of the voting age, is brimming with essays by people who can't wait to tell
    you why you should vote. The "celebrated Americans" of the subtitle include everyone from athletes to movie stars to
    entertainment journalists, and for the most part, they all say the exact same thing: your vote really does count.

    Some of the essays were better than others. The most enjoyable are those by authors who reveal something of their
    personal experience with voting and the political process. One contributor writes about the old lady he's seen
    working at polling places in his area for years; another writes about the vote her father cast for FDR that could have
    gotten him killed, since as a black man in the south he was practically forbidden from going to the polls.

    My favorite essay in the entire book was Meg Cabot's defense of feminism, which she correctly defines as the desire
    for men and women to have equal rights, and which she points out has very little to do with wearing (or not wearing)
    bras, or shaving (or not shaving) one's legs.

    For the most part, the contributors refrain from affiliating themselves with a specific political party, but a clever reader
    could easily decode their covert references to specific issues and make a good guess about where they stand. The
    contributors fall short when they begin to deliver platitudes, and at times the essays read like everything you've ever
    been told about why you should vote.

    The main shortcoming of the book is hinted at by James Kotecki in his essay, "The Cynical Revolution." And that is:
    would someone who is actually apathetic about voting pick up and read this book? To this, I add a second question:
    if they did, would they be lucky enough to open up to one of the essays that's good enough to convince them to
    vote?

    Overall, DECLARE YOURSELF is more likely to act as affirmation for those teens who've already made the
    decision to be voters. It does contain resources for people who think that voting means more than just casting a
    ballot on election day. The back of the book lists contact information for groups, organizations, political action
    committees, and others that readers may wish to contact. It also lists tips for getting involved in politics on the local
    level and offers a glossary of terms the aspiring politico needs to know.

    It might not be the way to convince teens that voting is the cool thing to do, but it's reassuring to know that
    someone's making the effort to reach out to the age group with the lowest representation in the polls and get them to
    do something about it.