Books (and More!) by Friends
December
2008
Dear
family and friends,
This
holiday season there is hope and change in the air, as well as lots of planning
and strategizing for hard work ahead. Books, films, poetry, music and more will
come in handy for making activist plans, and also for renewing our energies and
broadening our horizons. I'm blessed to have many old and new friends whose
creativity and dedication have added to the store of valuable works we can
choose from. I'd like to call some of them to your attention as you consider
your 2009 reading and cultural experience list or are thinking of buying a gift
for a friend or loved one. Take a look at the list below and enjoy!
Peace on
earth, good will to all.
Max
Speaking
of peace, two hard-hitting short volumes by Phyllis Bennis are just off the
press: Ending the Iraq War: A Primer and Understanding the U.S.-Iran Crisis: A Primer. For full info go to http://www.interlinkbooks.com/
To keep
track of how the fight for peace is going next year, put a copy of the War
Resister's League Peace Calendar, The Path of Most Resistance: A U.S. Radical
History Tour, on your wall. It's edited by Judith Mahoney Pasternak,
info at http://www.warresisters.org/node/442
The
title says it all on this one: Dying to Live: A Story of U.S. Immigration in
an Age of Global Apartheid, by Joe Nevins, with photographs by Mizue
Aizeki. Check it out at http://www.citylights.com/book/?GCOI=87286100601600
The same with David Bacon's fine volume: Illegal People: How Globalization Creates
Migration and Criminalizes Immigrants. Go to: http://dbacon.igc.org/
I've
written many of you earlier about Kendall Hale's riveting volume: Radical
Passions: A Memoir of Revolution and Healing, info at www.radicalpassions.org
. Another valuable memoir of the Vietnam era and beyond is Paul Krehbiel's Shades
Of Justice; go to www.autumnleafpress.com For something not quite a memoir but close -
an "autobiographical novel" - check out Hilton Obenzinger's Busy
Dying, http://www.obenzinger.com/.
How about
some music? Burton Li plays guitar with The Botticellis - http://www.thebotticellis.com/
- check out their CD Old Home Movies or see them play
live if you can. And Rebecca Bortman rocks as lead singer in My First
Earthquake; go to their great site http://www.myfirstearthquake.com/ and
check out their first EP Tremors.
Maybe
poetry is more your holiday style? Get
a copy of The Space Between by Aimee Suzara, info at www.finishinglinepress.com
and the site for all Aimee's excellent work is http://aimeesuzara.net/
Perhaps
seeing a new film is on your agenda? Take a look at the award-winning Palestine
Blues by Nida Sinnokrat. It's not new this year, but I only met Nida in
2008, you can read a bit about him and the film at: http://imeu.net/news/article005849.shtml
Back to
books, here's a special item featuring wonderful poster art put together by
Lincoln Cushing: Visions of Peace & Justice: 30 Years Of Political Posters from the
Archives of Inkworks Press - http://www.docspopuli.org/articles/IW/IW.html
And coming next year, by Lincoln and Tim Drescher – with whom I go back 40
years now! - Agitate! Educate! Organize! American Labor Posters - http://www.docspopuli.org/ArtWorks.html
Getting
well-deserved excellent reviews is Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized
Labor and a New Path Toward Social Justice by Bill Fletcher, Jr. and
Fernando Gapasin. Info at: http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/11121.php.
The
previous books-by-friends message flagged Estella Habal's top-notch volume, San
Francisco's International Hotel: Mobilizing The Filipino American Community In
The Anti-Eviction Movement; My review of it for make/shift is at http://www.revolutionintheair.com/histstrategy/sfihotel.html (Elsewhere on the Revolution in the Air
site you can find pictures from my 2008 Marathon for Peace, other book reviews
and articles of interest).
Last,
I've already got a growing list of books and other creative works by friends
due out in 2009 – send more if you have something in the pipeline (or if there
is something that I, with apologies, have missed). So look for more
recommendations next year!