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Deciding to See: The View from Nathan's Bus

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Deciding to See: The View from Nathan's Bus

Contributors:

By (Author) Nathan Vass

ISBN:

9781634050777

Publisher:

Chin Music Press

Imprint:

Chin Music Press

Publication Date:

30th July 2025

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

History
Photography and photographs
Literary essays
Memoirs

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

224

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 19mm

Description

Deciding to See: The View from Nathan's Busis an eye-opening, inspiring, and hopeful linked-essay collection recounting the amazing everyday encounters of city bus driver, Nathan Vass whose life's motto is if you give kindness, you'll get kindness. Vass tests this theory on the roughest nighttime routes in Seattle. The results illuminate the challenges of poverty, homelessness, and crossing class boundaries. Vass intertwines personal stories of trauma from his survival of the 2015 Paris terror attacks, showing that we are all struggling with tragedy. These brief but meaningful encounters foster healing for everyone involved. The ordinary becomes extraordinary when he chooses to see the beauty of each person who steps onto his bus. Come along for the ride.

Reviews

Replete with kindness, humility, gratitude, and wonder, Deciding to See delivers what only the greatest of memoir can: a polished, sparkling lens. Through it, readers will see both subject and author, and they will observe that Nathan Vass has written an essential guidebook on how to be human--how to live, and perhaps how to die. --Clayton Page Aldern, author of The Weight of Nature
This book is an antidote to cynicism. Vass weaves personal history--including his experience surviving the terrorist attacks in Paris on 2015, and being listed as missing, presumed dead--and stories from his two decades as a driver on Seattle's most colorful bus route into a moving argument for empathy. As a longtime bus driver, Vass treats even his most troublesome riders--the ones who stumble in drunk, screaming at their kids, or try to climb out the windows--like friends, a radical approach to a job that can breed misanthropy.In Seattle, as in a lot of cities, fentanyl is causing a new but familiar kind of crisis, and many have chosen to write off its victims as hopeless cases who brought their troubles on themselves. By treating every passenger as someone with dignity and their own human story, Vass shows how kindness (even, sometimes, through gritted teeth) can create connections and improve the lives of people who tend to get written off. I know this, in part, because I rode Nathan's bus at a time when I was visibly struggling, and his friendly, nonjudgmental greeting was often the best thing about my day.
--Erica C. Barnett, author of Quitter: A Memoir of Drinking, Relapse, and Recovery

Author Bio

Nathan Vass is an artist, filmmaker, photographer, and author by day, and a Metro bus driver by night, where his community-building work has been showcased on TED, NPR, The Seattle Times, KING5 and more, landing him a spot on Seattle Magazine's 2018 list of the 35 Most Influential People in Seattle, and Seattle Met's 2021 Power Players list. A Korean-American born in South Central LA, Nathan holds a BFA in Photography from the University of Washington, and has been featured in the Seattle Art Museum, Henry Art Gallery, and more, with 40 photography shows and 9 films including the award-winning festival favorite Men I Trust. His first book, The Lines That Make Us, is a Seattle bestseller and 2019 Washington State Book Award Finalist in Non-Fiction. Learn more at nathanvass.com.

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