Friends
and family,
It's
another year in which many friends have written and published books. And very
good ones too! In today's so-called "media environment" it's not easy
for volumes that aren't promoted by corporate giants to gain a significant
audience. So that's an additional reason to check out one or more of the
valuable works listed below.
I'll
begin though with a heads up about an interactive workshop on today's economic
crisis and a manuscript that is still a book-to-be.
Meltdown is a lively and participatory
workshop that gets the audience talking in depth about the roots of the current
crisis and the way the banking system really works. Put together by Eileen
Raphael and the Just Economics team, it's already been used by a dozen community
groups from Boise, Idaho to Montclair, New Jersey. See an excerpt on the web
and get full info at http://drpop.org/organizing-clinic/
Turn to the Working Class: The New
Left, Black Liberation and the U.S. Labor Movement (1967-1981) by Kerry Taylor is the kind of
detailed study of left experience we need a lot more of. The manuscript is
available now at www.revolutionintheair.com in the Left history section.
Kerry would appreciate your comments as he prepares to turn this version into a
book. There are other new items on the Revolution in the Air site as well: a
second manuscript on the work of revolutionary organizations in the U.S. South
in the 1970s, a new review, new reader comment and previous Books-by-Friends
messages from 2007 and 2008 in case you missed those.
Now to the
books:
Rick
Rocamora’s new book of photographs, Filipino
World War II Soldiers: America’s Second Class Veterans is full of the passion
and purpose that has always characterized Rick's outstanding work. There's an
intro by Rene Ciria-Cruz; ordering information is at http://filvetsbookproject.blogspot.com/.
Rick isn't the only old friend I first met during the 1970s when I worked closely
with the Union of Democratic Filipinos (KDP) who has a volume on the shelves
now. Walden Bello's new book is The Food
Wars. Estella Habal's San
Francisco's International Hotel: Mobilizing the Filipino American Community in
the Anti-Eviction Movement was flagged in a previous Books-by-Friends
message. Also check out Davianna Pomaika'i McGregor's Na Kua'aina: Living Hawaiian Culture.
My
friend Paul Buhle from even further back - we met in SDS in the 1960s - is
editor of the new volume The Beats: A
Graphic History, with artwork described as "vivid as the beat movement
itself." Paul's recent efforts also include editing the graphic adaptation
of Howard Zinn's A People's History of
American Empire, Che: A Graphic
Biography, by Spain Rodriguez, and Isadora
Duncan: A Graphic Biography, by Sabrina Jones. Another person I met (but
wasn't then friends with) back in SDS days, Mark Rudd, has penned a memoir whose
honesty about problems within the left matches its passion in denouncing racism
and war. Underground: My Life with SDS
and the Weathermen is a welcome antidote to the fog of sanitized history
and superficial romance that surrounds one of the more controversial strands of
the righteous upheavals of the late 1960s.
For a
different type of "underground" - underground commix - check out Underground Classics: The Transformation of
Comics into Comix, co-authored by Jim Danky. Info:
http://www.abramsbooks.com/Books/Underground_Classics-9780810905986.html
A remarkable
slice of history brought to life is found in Barbara Epstein's The Minsk Ghetto 1941-1943: Jewish
Resistance and Soviet Internationalism. Rod Bush's new volume, The End of White World Supremacy: Black
Internationalism and the Problem of the Color Line, is a deft exploration
of the "long and
complicated history of the relations between Black radicals and the world
Left."
For
on-the-ground experiences in U.S. politics, and their lessons, take a look at
Mike Miller's inside story of the rise and decline of the Mission Coalition
Organization, A Community Organizer’s
Tale: People and Power in San Francisco. John Delloro's volume, American Prayer, collects the original
run of essays on the 2008 presidential election written by the author for the
on-line column of the Asian American Action Fund.
As more
fierce rounds loom in the battle for immigrant rights and over immigration
policy, you can't do better than the new reader issued by the Black Alliance
for Just Immigration for a compendium of resources and perspectives. Full
information on the new BAJI Reader
can be found at: http://blackalliance.org/main/?q=node/38
On the
artistic and cultural fronts, this book is not by a friend of mine but it is
about one: Yolanda Lopez, by Karen
Mary Davalos, analyzes the key themes running through Yolanda's exceptional
body of work, including her groundbreaking Virgin of Guadalupe series of
paintings in the late 1970s. Sesshu Foster's new volume, World Ball Notebook, has been aptly termed "hybrid poetry that
is scandalous in its revolutionary spirit and aims." And it's not too late
to see the wonderful collection Up
Against the Wall - Berkeley Posters from the 1960s curated by Lincoln
Cushing. The full catalogue is on-line at the URL below; if you are in the Bay
Area, the actual posters are on display at the Berkeley Historical Society
through September 26: http://www.docspopuli.org/articles/BHS2009.html
Apologies
in advance for any volumes I have missed, send me details so I can include them
in next year's message.
Have fun
reading, looking, and pondering…
Peace,
Max