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Monday Noon to 5 pm
Wednesday - Saturday, 11 am to 6 pm
Sunday, 11 am to 5 pm

Closed Tuesday

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ABOUT US

Black Sheep Books, a community space and bookstore in Montpelier, Vermont, offers affordable radical and scholarly books, and hosts educational events on cultural and political topics. As an all-volunteer project, we are operated by a five-member collective hand in hand with a group of dedicated volunteers. Our principle focus is to provide access to anti-authoritarian Left ideas in a way that promotes intellectual debate and challenges today’s hegemonic culture.

We see print media and public talks as necessary for the development of critical consciousness and ultimately social change. Such engagement with the transformative power of ideas connects us to each other, helps us to understand our historical context, and guides us in action. This linking of past to present, theory to practice, is a crucial precondition for the emergence of a free and directly democratic society.

By creating this space in public, we strive to contest the depoliticization and alienation rampant under statist and capitalist social relations. We also aim to generate visibility for identities marginalized by normative values and systems of domination through providing community resources and a welcoming space in the context of our rural location.

Together with horizontalist social movements and political projects, bookstores, infoshops, and publishers, Black Sheep Books works toward an egalitarian, ecological, and nonhierarchical society.

Black Sheep Books is an all-volunteer, collectively run project specializing in radical and scholarly used books.
5 State Street, Montpelier, VT | (802) 225-8906

Struggle in South Africa: Radical Visions of Democratic Participation

Countless people fought in the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa dreamed of a much broader transformation of society, beyond the right to vote and an end to racial discrimination. Why are the stories of these people rarely heard? Why is the end of apartheid so disappointing, so much less 'liberating' than the struggle promised to be? How do we revive and gain inspiration from the radical visions generated by previous generations of struggle in South Africa? Taylor
Sparrow will engage these questions by examining the life of Richard Turner, a radical South African activist who called for a society in which people are able to participate as much as possible in the decisions that affect their lives.

info@blacksheepbooks.org | (802) 225-8906 | 5 State Street, Montpelier, VT, 05602