MikeDunnAuthor , to History
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History May 19, 1989: Trinidadian Marxist historian and journalist C.L.R. James died. James was the author of The Black Jacobins (1938), Breaking a Boundary (1963), numerous articles and essays on class and race antagonism, West Indian self-determination, cricket, Marxism, & aesthetics. In 1933, he published the pamphlet The Case for West-Indian Self Government. He was a champion of Pan-Africanism and a member of the Friends of Ethiopia, an organization opposed to fascism and the Italian conquest of Ethiopia. He also wrote a play about the Haitian Revolution, Toussaint L’Ouverture, the Story of the Only Successful Slave Revolt in History. Paul Robeson starred in the 1936 British production.

@bookstadon

johmmlhll , to writing group
@johmmlhll@mastodon.ie avatar
MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

You do not want to miss this epic moment at Avantpop Bookstore!!
6 Authors
Punks. Activism. Music.
The holy trinity!
It's only happening once, reading freaks!
Sun, May 26th, Noon to 3pm
⚡️PUNKS WITH BOOKS⚡️
Reading and Signings with
SIX AUTHORS
🔸️Billy Bragg
🔸️Jason Lamb
🔸️Michelle Cruz-Gonzales
🔸️James Tracy
🔸️Juanita E. Mantz
🔸️Mike Dunn
Books are available for sale at the event, while supplies last
🤘💀📚
Avantpop Bookstore
900 Liberace Ave D102
Las Vegas, NV 89109
Avantpopbooks.com/events


@bookstadon

ALT
  • Reply
  • Loading...
  • emeraldzak , to bookstodon group
    @emeraldzak@sunny.garden avatar

    hello fedi and/or @bookstodon pls demand a story, written by me, for you. Any and all genres and settings welcome. As specific or general as you'd like.

    My idea-generator is temporarily burnt out. Parts on backorder.

    I will of course never show it to you but it's good practice and maybe I'll show it to you if it somehow turns out well.

    Listen, I'm just trying to set expectations here, I'm in my "everything I write is garbage and I know it because I have good, discerning tastes" phase and gotta get past it somehow.
    The somehow is ever-increasing word count and facing off against the unfamiliar. Gotta beat up the monsters so I can summon them later.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to History
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History May 18, 1781: Tupac Amaru II was drawn and quartered in Plaza Mayor del Cuzco, Peru. Tupac II had led a large indigenous uprising against the Spanish conquistadors. As a result of his heroic efforts, he became an inspiration to others in the fight for indigenous rights and against colonialism. The uprising began because of “reforms” by the colonial administration that increased taxes and labor demands on both indigenous and creole populations. However, there was also an ongoing desire to overthrow European rule and restore the pre-conquest Incan empire. And though this would merely replace one feudal power with another, there were also Jacobin and proto-communist elements to the rebellion. Most of the Tupamarista soldiers were poor peasants, artisans and women who saw the uprising as an opportunity to create an egalitarian society, without the cast and class divisions of either the Spanish or Incan feudal systems.

    The uprising began with the execution of Spanish colonial Governor Antonio de Arriaga by his own slave, Antonio Oblitas. Tupac Amaru II then made a proclamation claiming to be fighting against the abuses of Spain and for the peace and well-being of Indians, mestizos, mambos, native-born whites and blacks. They then proceeded to march toward Cuzco, killing Spaniards and looting their properties. Everywhere they went, they overthrew the Spanish authority. Tupac’s wife, Michaela Bastidas commanded a battalion of insurgents. Many claimed she was more daring and a superior strategist than her husband.

    However, despite their strength and courage, the rebels failed to take Cuzco. The Spaniards brought in reinforcements from Lima. Many creoles abandoned the Inca army and joined the Spanish, fearing for their own safety after seeing the wanton slaughter of Spanish civilians. In the end, Tupac was betrayed by two of his officers and handed over to the Spanish. However, before they killed him, the Spanish forced him to watch them execute his wife, eldest son, uncle, brother-in-law, and several of his captains. They cut out both his wife’s and son’s tongue before hanging them.

    As a result of Tupac’s leadership and success against the Spanish, he became a mythical figure in the Peruvian struggle for independence and in the indigenous rights movement. The Tupamaros revolutionary movement in Uruguay (1960s-1970s) took their name from him. As did the Túpac Amaru Revolutionary guerrilla group, in Peru, and the Venezuelan Marxist political party Tupamaro. American rapper, Tupac Amaru Shakur, was also named after him. Chilean poet, Pablo Neruda, wrote a poem called “Tupac Amaru (1781).” And Clive Cussler’s book, “Inca Gold,” has a villain who claims to be descended from the revolutionary leader.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History May 16, 1912: Studs Terkel was born, New York City. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1985 for his book The Good War, a collection of oral histories from World War II. He was born to Russian-Jewish parents. He joined the Works Progress Administration’s Federal Writers’ Project. This provided him work in radio. He is best known for his oral histories, and his raido program, The Studs Terkel Program, which aired on WFMT, Chicago, from 1952-1997. Some of the people he interviewed on this show included: Bob Dylan, Big Bill Broonzy, Frank Zappa, Leonard Bernstein, Martin Luther King and Tennessee Williams.

    #workingclass #LaborHistory #StudsTerkel #union #jewish #pulitzer #radio #books #writer #author #nonfiction @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 16, 1906: Margaret Rey was born. Rey was an author an illustrator of children’s books. She cowrote the Curious George books with her husband H.A. Rey. Born in Germany to Jewish parents, she studied art at Bauhaus and later worked in advertising. In 1935, she fled Germany to escape the Nazis, moving to Rio de Janeiro. There she met H.A. Rey, also a German Jew who had fled the Nazis. Many of us remember the Curious George stories fondly. George was a monkey, who was kind of like an adorable little boy. Yet in every one of the stories, he does something naughty that disappoints his “daddy,” (The man in the Yellow Hat), and has to win back his affection doing something dangerous. In one story, he is exploited by a cook and must wash dishes without pay. In another, he is hired as a window washer on a skyscraper. Even his origin story is fraught, with the Yellow Hatted Man kidnapping him from his home in Africa. In this video clip, hear Werner Herzog’s creepy satire on the stories:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7T8y5EPv6Y8

    #workingclass #LaborHistory #curiousgeorge #books #fiction #childrensbooks #wernerherzog #illustrator #nazis #fascism #antisemitism #author #margaretrey #HARey #writer @bookstadon

    johmmlhll , to writing group
    @johmmlhll@mastodon.ie avatar

    Still crafting content for my upcoming author site, Author Mulhall 📚, soon to be live at authormulhall.com. The Author News Corner page is in the works—thoughts on the design? @writing @writingcooperative @writingtheother @Writing_ie @writers

    pivic , to bookstodon group
    @pivic@kolektiva.social avatar

    A life in quotes: Alice Munro | Alice Munro | The Guardian https://www.theguardian.com/books/article/2024/may/14/alice-munro-nobel-prize-author-dies

    Rest in power, Alice Munro, a very astute writer. she was one of my favourite short-story writers.

    @bookstodon

    OwenTyme , to bookstodon group
    @OwenTyme@mastodon.social avatar

    The author that brought you Troll Song and Forgotten Legends now offers you the chance to read the third book in the The Wizard's Scion: The Third Wish.

    $3.99 Ebook and $18.99 paperback.

    https://books2read.com/b/TheThirdWish

    @bookstodon

    ALT
  • Reply
  • Loading...
  • MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 13, 1944: Tales of the City author Armistead Maupin was born. Maupin wrote the novels over the course of nearly forty years, (1978-2014). He was one of the first writers to incorporate the AIDS epidemic into his novels.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    On July 22, 1916, someone set off a bomb during the pro-war “Preparedness Day” parade in San Francisco. As a result, 10 people died and 40 were injured. A jury convicted two labor leaders, Thomas Mooney and Warren Billings, based on the false testimony of Martin Swanson, a detective with a long history of interfering in San Francisco strikes. Not surprisingly, only anarchists were suspected in the bombing. Swanson maintained constant surveillance and harassment of Mooney and Warren Billings, as well as Alexander Berkman & Emma Goldman. A few days after the bombing, they searched and seized materials from the offices of “The Blast,” Alexander Berkman and Emma Goldman’s local paper. They also threatened to arrest Berkman. Billings and Mooney ultimately served 23 years in prison for a crime they had not committed. Governor Edmund G. Brown pardoned them in 1961.

    Billings and Mooney were both anarchists, and members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). As a young man in San Francisco, Tom Mooney published The Revolt, a socialist newspaper. He was tried and acquitted three times for transporting explosives during the Pacific Gas & Electric strike in 1913. Consequently, the cops already believed he was a bomber, prior to the Preparedness Day parade.

    In 1937, Mooney filed a writ of habeas corpus, providing evidence that his conviction was based on perjured testimony and evidence tampering. Among this evidence was a photograph of him in front of a large, ornate clock, on Market Street, clearly showing the time of the bombing and that he could not have been at the bombing site when it occurred. He was finally released in 1939. Upon his release, he marched in a huge parade down Market Street. Cops and leaders of the mainstream unions were all forbidden from participating. An honor guard of longshoremen accompanied him carrying their hooks. His case helped establish that convictions based on false evidence violate people’s right to due process.

    The Alibi Clock was later moved to downtown Vallejo, twenty-five miles to the northeast of San Francisco. A bookstore in Vallejo is named after this clock. On May 11, 2024, I did a reading there from my working-class historical novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill, during the Book Release Party for Roberta Tracy’s, Zig Zag Woman, which takes place at the time of the Los Angeles Times bombing, in 1910, when two other labor leaders, the McNamara brothers, were framed.

    In 1931, while Mooney and Billings were still in prison, I. J. Golden persuaded the Provincetown Theater to produce his play, “Precedent,” about the Mooney and Billings case. Brooks Atkinson of the New York Times wrote, “By sparing the heroics and confining himself chiefly to a temperate exposition of his case [Golden] has made “Precedent” the most engrossing political drama since the Sacco-Vanzetti play entitled Gods of the Lightening… Friends of Tom Mooney will rejoice to have his case told so crisply and vividly.”

    During the Spanish war against fascism (AKA the Spanish Civil War), many Americans volunteered to join the antifascist cause as part of the Abraham Lincoln Brigades. One of the battalions was named the Tom Mooney Machine-Gun Company. It was led by Oliver Law, a communist, and the first black man known to have commanded white U.S. troops.

    @bookstadon

    Photograph of the author, Michael Dunn, in front of the Alibi Clock, now in Vallejo, California, near the Alibi Bookstore
    Close up of the plaque on the Alibi Clock, Vallejo, CA. Reads: The Alibi Clock, city landmark #5, designated on September 20, 1984.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 10, 1999: Shel Silverstein, American poet, cartoonist, singer-songwriter, musician, and playwright died on this day. His books have been translated into more than 47 languages and sold over 20 million copies Some of his most famous children’s books include “The Giving Tree,” “Where the Sidewalk Ends,” and “A Light in the Attic.” As a songwriter, he wrote the Johnny Cash hits "A Boy Named Sue" and “25 Minutes to Go,” as well as the Dr. Hook hit, “Freakin’ at the Freakers Ball.” He also composed hits for John Prine, Buck Owens, Emmylou Harris, Waylon Jennings, and Lester Flatt.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PN8PfuyowG0

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 9, 1981: Nelson Algren, American novelist and short story writer died. His most famous book was “The Man With The Golden Arm,” which was made into a film in 1955. He was called the “bard of the down-and-outer” based on his numerous stories about the poor, beaten down and addicted. Algren was also called a “gut radical.” His heroes included Big Bill Haywood, Eugene Debs and Clarence Darrow. He claims he never joined the Communist Party, but he participated in the John Reed Club and was an honorary co-chair of the “Save Ethel and Julius Rosenberg Committee.” The FBI surveilled him and had a 500-page dossier on him.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 9, 1946: Ayşe Nur Zarakolu, Turkish author and activist was born on this day. Along with her husband, she cofounded Belge publishing house. She published books on the Armenian Genocide and the human rights of Turkey’s Kurdish population. As a result, the government imprisoned her repeatedly. Amnesty International designated her a prison of conscience.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History May 9, 1907: Big Bill Haywood went on trial for murder in the bombing death of former Idaho governor Frank Steunenberg. Clarence Darrow defended Haywood and got him acquitted. Steunenberg had brutally suppressed the state’s miners. Haywood had been framed by a Pinkerton agent provocateur named James McParland, the same man who infiltrated the Pennsylvania miners’ union in the 1870s and got 20 innocent men executed as Molly Maguires. You can read about that in my novel, “Anywhere But Schuylkill.”

    Read my article on Pinkertons here: https://michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/04/union-busting-by-the-pinkertons/
    And my article on the Molly Maguires here: https://michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/13/the-myth-of-the-molly-maguires/

    @bookstadon

    ALT
  • Reply
  • Loading...
  • johmmlhll , to writers group
    @johmmlhll@mastodon.ie avatar

    Exciting news! Developing my author website, Author Mulhall 📚, coming soon at authormulhall.com. Got great feedback from our on feature image width for Desktop. Full or part screen—what’s your take? 🤔 @writing @writingtheother @writers @Writing_ie @authorindiespeak

    Feature image set to full screen width of my in development Author Mulhall site Books by John A Mulhall page. Its a listing of information about his novel long form work in progress and also his publications.

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 8, 1937: Thomas Pynchon, American novelist was born.

    @bookstadon

    MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Writing History May 7, 1867: Polish author Wladyslaw Reymont was born. His best-known work is the award-winning four-volume novel Chłopi (The Peasants), which won him the 1924 Nobel Prize in Literature. Also in 1924, he published his novel “Revolt,” about a rebellion of farm animals fighting for equality. However, the revolt quickly degenerates into bloody terror. It was a metaphor for the Bolshevik Revolution. Consequently, the Polish authorities banned it from 1945 to 1989. Reymont’s farm animal rebellion predated Orwell’s by 21 years.

    @bookstadon

    OwenTyme , to bookstodon group
    @OwenTyme@mastodon.social avatar

    Volume 3 of the Wizard's Scion, The Third Wish, is out of pre-order as an Ebook! The paperback edition should be available soon!

    https://books2read.com/TheThirdWish

    @bookstodon

    ALT
  • Reply
  • Loading...
  • MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    If you're in Vegas for the Punk Rock and Bowling festival this Memorial Day weekend, be sure to stop by Avantpop Books, Sunday, May 26, noon. I'll be reading from my working-class historical novel, "Anywhere But Schuylkill." Billy Bragg will be headlining, with his book, "Roots, Rockers and Radicals."

    @bookstadon

    NickEast , to writingcommunity group
    @NickEast@geekdom.social avatar
    ALT
  • Reply
  • Loading...
  • MikeDunnAuthor , to bookstadon group
    @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

    Today in Labor History May 2, 1919: Soldiers of the Freikorps murdered Gustav Landauer, anarchist, pacifist, and Education Minister, in the short-lived Bavarian Workers Republic. The Freikorps were right wing veterans of World War I. Many went on to become Nazis. Landauer believed that social change could not be won solely through control of the state or economy, but required a revolution in interpersonal relations. "The community we long for and need, we will find only if we sever ourselves from individuated existence; thus we will at last find, in the innermost core or our hidden being, the most ancient and most universal community: the human race and the cosmos." Landauer’s grandson is the acclaimed film director, Mike Nichols (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, The Graduate, Catch-22, Carnal Knowledge, Silkwood). British writer Philip Kerr wrote the novel, “Prussian Blue,” in which Hitler is one of the Freikorps militants who murdered Landauer.

    @bookstadon

    OwenTyme , to bookstodon group
    @OwenTyme@mastodon.social avatar

    Uncle Sam wanted every man he could get, but never expected a half-demon witch girl to show up for the Vietnam War...

    https://books2read.com/SheGoesToWar

    @bookstodon

    ALT
  • Reply
  • Loading...
  • BZBrainz , to bookstodon group
    @BZBrainz@mastodonbooks.net avatar

    @bookstodon @bookwyrm
    If you read large print or dyslexic font paperback books do you prefer this to be indicated on the cover (say on a banner at the top) to help you identify the accommodation?

    I compiled a quick poll based on different perspectives I've read.

    ➡️ Please consider sharing to help me reach more readers.

    BZBrainz OP ,
    @BZBrainz@mastodonbooks.net avatar

    @bookstodon many months ago I received feedback that some readers disliked how I labeled my large-font edition of Late Identified workbook. So I could do better, I asked.

    The majority that participated reported they wanted the accommodation labeled on their paperback in a visible way.

    “Large Font Edition” or “Dyslexic Font Edition”

    When I asked where, most said on the spine.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • supersentai
  • WatchParties
  • Rutgers
  • jeremy
  • Lexington
  • cragsand
  • mead
  • RetroGamingNetwork
  • loren
  • steinbach
  • xyz
  • PowerRangers
  • AnarchoCapitalism
  • kamenrider
  • Mordhau
  • WarhammerFantasy
  • itdept
  • AgeRegression
  • mauerstrassenwetten
  • MidnightClan
  • space_engine
  • learnviet
  • bjj
  • Teensy
  • khanate
  • electropalaeography
  • neondivide
  • fandic
  • All magazines