Also included are a Mother Jones article from 1901, a tribute by Eugene V Debs, an introduction by Clarence Darrow, helpful annotations to the text, a full bibliography and an index. IWW historian Fred Thompson's Afterword provides useful background and fills in important gaps in Mother Jones' story. In a new Foreword Meridel LeSueur vividly recalls her 1914 meeting with Mother Jones. With dazzling ingenuity she fights back to destroy the untouchable crime lords who put her there. This abundantly illustrated new edition includes a host of valuable additions. If Tomorrow Comes Lovely, idealistic Tracy Whitney is framed into a fifteen year sentence in an escape-proof penitentiary. Mother Jones' lively narrative - every page bristling with her characteristic humor, indignation and uncommon sense - is a masterpiece of American radicalism. Here too is the exciting story of her crusade against child labor, her innovative efforts to organize working women, her experiences in court and in jail, and her daring involvement in the Mexican Revolution. I n steel, railroading, metal mining, textiles, and above all, the coal industry, Mother Jones fought alongside strikers. In this classic work of American nonfiction the greatest labor organizer in US history details her three quarter century fight for labor's liberation, and her unswerving belief in industrial unionism as the key to that struggle.
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