Special thanks to Norvan Fullerton for allowing me use of his robber speech, Barbara Temple-Thurston and Pacific Lutheran University, Kelly Hewson and Bill Schwarz for support; Laurie and Tessa Watkins for their unforgettable hospitality; Margaret Busby, Funso Aiyejina and Alake Pilgrim for reading and responding to the manuscript; and Derek Walcott for the generosity of his presence and work.
About Haymarket Books
Haymarket Books is a nonprofit, progressive book distributor and publisher, a project of the Center for Economic Research and Social Change. We believe that activists need to take ideas, history, and politics into the many struggles for social justice today. Learning the lessons of past victories, as well as defeats, can arm a new generation of fighters for a better world. As Karl Marx said, “The philosophers have merely interpreted the world; the point however is to change it.”
We take inspiration and courage from our namesakes, the Haymarket Martyrs, who gave their lives fighting for a better world. Their 1886 struggle for the eight-hour day reminds workers around the world that ordinary people can organize and struggle for their own liberation.
For more information and to shop our complete catalog of titles, visit us online at www.haymarketbooks.org.
Also from Haymarket Books
Field Notes on Democracy • Arundhati Roy
Notes from the Middle World • Breyten Breytenbach
Essays • Wallace Shawn
Black Power Mixtape • Edited by Göran Hugo Olsson
Palante • Young Lords Party, photographs by Michael Abramson, introduction by Iris Morales
About the Author
Earl Lovelace was born in Toco, Trinidad, and has spent most of his life on the islands of Trinidad and Tobago. He has been a journalist, has been Writer-in-Residence at the University of the West Indies and at universities in the United States and Britain, and has given lectures and readings and participated in conferences internationally. His books have been translated into German, Dutch, French, Italian, Japanese, and Hungarian, and his short stories have been widely anthologized. His books include The Wine of Astonishment, While Gods Are Falling, winner
of the BP Independence Award, the Caribbean classic
The Dragon Can’t Dance, and Salt, which won the 1997 Commonwealth Writers Prize.
Robyn Cross
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