Valarie Kaur presents revolutionary love as both personal practice and political methodology, drawing on Sikh tradition, social justice organizing, and her own experience as a target of hate after 9/11. Kaur, a civil rights lawyer and filmmaker, witnessed the murder of a family friend in the first hate crime killing after September 11 and spent the following decades documenting violence against Sikhs, Muslims, and others marked as enemies. The book develops a practice of revolutionary love in three dimensions: love for others, which requires seeing even enemies as human; love for opponents, which seeks to transform rather than destroy; and love for ourselves, which demands we tend our wounds rather than passing them on. Kaur combines memoir with political analysis and spiritual reflection, moving between personal stories of violence and healing and broader arguments about how love might function as a public ethic. She addresses skepticism about love's political relevance while insisting that movements without love become mirrors of what they oppose. The book emerged from a talk Kaur delivered that went viral, and it maintains that combination of intimate address and prophetic urgency. Kaur writes for activists seeking sustainable practice and for anyone wondering whether love has meaning beyond the personal.