Book publishers see increased demand for print copies of the US Constitution


We’re almost at the “First 100 Days” mark of Trump 2.0 — yes, it’s only been 100 days, sorry for the reminder — and even Fox News polling can’t hide the fact that Americans hate everything he is doing. (If only the Democratic candidate had laid out in detail that this is what Trump would do if reelected. Oh wait, that’s exactly what she did…) Trump, Musk, DOGE, Project 2025, et al. are swiftly executing the undoing of our government. I think it’s fair to say this is the most dire test of the American experiment that this country has ever faced (despite whatever delusions George Clooney espouses). So while the marauders are hacking away at our government, it seems citizens have been motivated to reacquaint themselves with exactly what the government is supposed to look like in the first place. Book publishers say that print copies of founding documents like the Declaration of Independence and US Constitution are “selling at their fastest pace” in 20 years:

On Wednesday, Random House announced that it would publish a hardcover book in July combining the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution, followed in November by a hardcover edition of the Federalist Papers. Both books include introductions by Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Jon Meacham, who has written biographies of Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson, among others.

The Random House volumes, released through its Modern Library imprint, will join a prolific market that has surged in recent months. According to Circana, which tracks around 85% of the print retail market, editions of the Declaration of Independence, the Federalist Papers and the U.S. Constitution are selling at their fastest pace since Circana began compiling numbers in 2004.

Around 162,000 combined copies have sold through mid-April, compared to 58,000 during the same time in the early months of Trump’s first term, in 2017, more than double the pace of 2016.

Brenna Connor, a book industry analyst for Circana, said the jump “is likely in response to the recent change of administration” and cited increased interest in other books about democracy and government, among them Timothy Snyder’s “On Tyranny” and the Michael Lewis-edited “Who Is Government?” a collection of essays about civil servants by Dave Eggers, Geraldine Brooks, Sarah Vowell and others.

“This pursual of political understanding is playing out in a few different areas,” Connor added.

Meacham, during a phone interview with The Associated Press, said that the founders had sought to make sense of a revolutionary era — whether breaking with England or debating how to form a federal government with enough power to rule effectively, without giving it the kind of monarchical authority that enraged the colonies.

Reading the Declaration and other texts, he believes, can give today’s public a similar sense of mission and guiding principles.

“It is a tumultuous moment … to put it kindly,” Meacham said. “One way to address the chaos of the present time, what Saint Paul would call the ‘tribulations’ of the present time, is to re-engage with the essential texts that are about creating a system that is still worth defending.”

…“We generally see increased sales of editions of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution every election cycle, but particularly this year,” said Shannon DeVito, Barnes & Noble’s senior director of book strategy. “This could be because next year marks the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence,” she said, “or the fast and furious current political conversations and policy changes.”

[From AP News via AOL]

Hallelujah — news of Americans buying books instead of banning them. I’m so buoyed by this reporting! My only quibble is that I wish Random House would get their first release out sooner than July, because it would make a wonderful graduation gift. I’m a sucker for a beautiful hardcover, so that combined with the civic zeal of this moment may prompt me to indulge in the Declaration—Constitution combo volume. And I do believe I have a scathingly brilliant idea: you know how drag queens do storytime at libraries to read to little kids? Well, I’d like to do the same thing for grown ups and have drag queens read us the Constitution. Come on, you know it would be a fabulous celebration of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness! And most certainly a more perfect union of patriotic citizens than that which is currently in the Gold/White House.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that reading is power, and dissent is patriotic.

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Photos credit: Larry Alger and Mike Doherty on Unsplash, Julian Cordero on Pexels and Getty

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23 Responses to “Book publishers see increased demand for print copies of the US Constitution”

  1. Nikki (Toronto) says:

    I’m in Canada, and I started picking up hard copies of books when the southern states started banning them a couple of years ago. If the wrong party wins here next week, Canada will follow you into the abyss.

    • Hypocrisy says:

      I’m in Florida and when they start banning books here that were required reading when my children attended school (in a northern state) I started purchasing them also.. I have two copies of the constitution in my library.

    • Sydneygirl says:

      I’m in Australia, we have a federal election next weekend too and a Trump adjacent candidate that I hope gets soundly flogged at the polls.

      Buying those books isn’t a bad idea.

      • MerlinsMom1018 says:

        Good luck Australia!!! We support you and I sincerely hope the dumpster adjacent candidate gets the 💩 kicked out of them

    • MerlinsMom1018 says:

      @Nikki
      Nooooooo. Not Canada too 😲

      Good luck! We support you and have y’alls back!

      (p.s. been to Toronto many times and love it)

  2. IdlesAtCranky says:

    Thank you for the reminder.
    💙💙💙📚📚

    I have editions of these documents in my tree book library, but I just went and picked up the U.S. Constitution, the Declaration, the Federalist Papers, and Thomas Paine’s Common Sense in ebook versions.

    It’s good to have them on hand for easy reference.

    #Resist #NoKings

    • Hypocrisy says:

      I rather have the hardcopy in my hands I don’t trust that companies won’t remove ebooks books if the 🍊 🍑 orders it.

      • Blithe says:

        Getting hard copies is an excellent idea. One of the downsides of electronic media is that they can be altered. Imagine if every “shalt not” or whatever was altered to instead read “shalt”. Those of us not intimately familiar with the documents might never realize that we’re getting altered documents and altered ideals.

    • Tanisha says:

      My roommate and I have been collecting hard copies of everything because the ebook versions are not yours. They can be removed from your digital library by whomever you buy them from . Once you learn you don’t actually own your digital copies in books, movies, TV shows or music, we knew that we needed to collect hard copies

      • TurbanMa says:

        I’ve been going on thrift books and getting 2nd and 3rd copies of my favorites. I like being able to gift them but just felt even more important right now to have my own library.

  3. Gala says:

    I’ve literally never commented before but felt I had to tell y’all: we literally have a history-themed drag show at the museum where I work! Museums are trying so hard to provide that missing piece between the past and the present that has landed us in this horrible moment. Visit your local museums, I bet you’ll find the community we all so desperately need right now. And Virginia peeps, come see me!

  4. Lover says:

    I work at a bookstore and can confirm the constitution is selling more than usual. We’re also selling a lot more of 1984, Animal Farm, Fahrenheit 451, and Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny.

  5. TurbanMa says:

    The ACLU website sells them and in bulk if needed. My husband was gifted a copy when he naturalized and I was curious and recently went looking for who sells them. Consider purchasing a protect trans kids fanny pack while you’re there or a nice end mass incarceration t-shirt.

  6. Maja says:

    Meidas Touch, David Pakman, Brian Tyler Cohen, Luke Beasley, Jesse Dollemore and many others also help to understand …

  7. MerlinsMom1018 says:

    I carry my copy of the Constitution in my purse at all times. It’s also has the Declaration of Independence all in a nice hardcover book. I am not at all adverse to whipping it out when someone says “well, according to the constitution” and say show me where. Go ahead. I got time. Amazingly argument is ended

    I have copies for each of my grandkids plus paperbacks of all the banned books I can get my hands on
    I do have copies of the Federalist Papers and also anything by Thomas Paine I can find.

  8. Little Red says:

    I have been, myself, thinking that I should reread these documents. I read fragments in history and government classes in high school and university but haven’t read them in thirty plus years since.

  9. Tashiro says:

    I bought the charters of freedom set from the national archives. It doesn’t include the federalists papers though. I’ll have to get that.

  10. blunt talker says:

    When people start seeing their rights being taken away -it is time to relearn and understand exactly this country’s laws and rules to be able to stand and fight for your rights as an american citizen.

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