$9.99
Author: Douglas Clark
ISBN 978-1-63868-174-8 (eBook);
978-1-63868-172-4 (softcover);
978-1-63868-173-1 (hardcover)
390 pages
The coalfields of West Virginia in 1920-1921 were a place of extraordinary labor violence between striking miners facing off against armed mercenaries employed by mining corporations. In the remote mountain valleys of Appalachia, a region made infamous by the Hatfield-McCoy feud, coal miners and their families lived at the margins. Coal mining was a poorly paid brutal and dangerous occupation. Mining companies controlled corrupt local government, exerting a form of institutionalized oppression described as corporate feudalism.
Mine operators refused to negotiate labor agreements. Contracting with the Baldwin-Felts Detective Agency as armed security, mining interests repressed striking miners causing the worst labor violence in U.S. history. Into this hostile environment a decorated former U.S. Marine and an activist female lawyer come to West Virginia and become drawn into the conflict.
$28.99
Author: Leslie Rounds and Tara Vose Raiselis ISBN: 978-1-62137-750-4 (Softcover) 174 Pages In the late...
$9.99
Author: Portland Burn Survivors ISBN 978-1-62137-4244ISBN 978-1-62137-4664 158 pages "...do I believe?" is an anthology about...
$13.95
Author: Marc Pierre Bonis ISBN 978-1-63868-131-1 (softcover); 212 pages This book consists of 100 personal poems/ideas/observations the author wrote over...