Reviews for Fight like hell : the untold history of American labor

Publishers Weekly
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Journalist and union organizer Kelly debuts with a rousing look at the contributions of marginalized groups to the U.S. labor movement. She begins by placing the “middle-aged Black warehouse workers” who tried to unionize an Amazon fulfillment center in Alabama in 2021 within a “long lineage of working class heroes,” including the 19th-century female mill workers who fought for a workday shorter than 16 hours. Kelly also recounts how an 1881 strike by Black laundresses in Atlanta brought the city’s laundry services to a halt on the eve of the International Cotton Exposition, and profiles U.S. labor secretary Frances Perkins, who helped enshrine workplace protections in New Deal legislation after having witnessed the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire. Elsewhere, Kelly examines how convict leasing helped prop up the South’s “faltering post-Confederate economy” and sketches the history of the 1891–1892 Coal Creek War in Tennessee, when “involuntary, incarcerated laborers” were brought in as strikebreakers but were freed repeatedly by the miners they were meant to replace. Shedding new light on key players and episodes within a diverse range of industries—from textile and trucking to sex work—this invigorating labor history is also a powerful call for today’s workers to fight for their rights. Agent: Chad Luibl, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Apr.)


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A working-class view of American labor unions and their history in securing economic justice, however fleeting.As I write this, writes journalist and labor activist Kelly, eleven hundred coal miners in rural Alabama are still out on a strike that began on April 1, 2021. Even as knowledge workers flee corporate life, spurred by the pandemic revelation that they can work anywhere, these coal miners are bound to geography and largely overlooked because coal is unpopular in a time of climate change. So it is with the larger history of labor unionism, Kelly suggests, at least in part because so many women and minority members were instrumental in it but are often written out of history. By way of one example, the author considers the case of a woman named Lucy Parsons, who grew up enslaved in the South and, with a husband who had fought for the Confederacy but later converted to anarchism, helped organize workers around the Haymarket riots of 1886. Sadly, Parsons refused to acknowledge her ethnicity and focused her energies solely on behalf of white factory workers. Nonetheless, Black activists were essential to working peoples efforts to secure better conditions, as Parsons was to gaining the eight-hour workday. Here Kelly examines the militancy of Mohawk ironworkers who helped build the skyscrapers of 1920s New York, walking across two-inch-thick beams hundreds of feet in the air without so much as a tremble, and of the multiethnic Coalition for Immokalee Workers, which exposed what amounted to slave labor on Southern farms in our own time. Injustices continue, from coal miners to immigrant workers bound to company stores and housing in Midwestern meatpacking plants. Collective working class power was behind every stride forward this country has made, Kelly writes in an urgent closing section, grudgingly or otherwise, and will continue to be the animating force behind any true progress.A well-reasoned argument for restoring unions to their former role in the lives of American workers. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Independent journalist and Teen Vogue labor columnist Kelly offers an expansive view of the U.S. labor movement, going back to the 1860s to show that one of the country's first unions was founded by Black Mississippi freedwomen. From Jewish immigrant garment workers in early 1900s New York to Latinx and Asian American farmworkers in 1970s California, from Ida Mae Stull's 1934 bid to work alongside men in an Ohio coalmine to Dorothy Lee Bolden's founding of the National Domestic Worker's Union of America in the 1960s, Kelly highlights an inclusive fight for fair wages and better working conditions. With a 60,000-copy first printing.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A working-class view of American labor unions and their history in securing economic justice, however fleeting. “As I write this,” writes journalist and labor activist Kelly, “eleven hundred coal miners in rural Alabama are still out on a strike that began on April 1, 2021.” Even as knowledge workers flee corporate life, spurred by the pandemic revelation that they can work anywhere, these coal miners are bound to geography and largely overlooked because coal is unpopular in a time of climate change. So it is with the larger history of labor unionism, Kelly suggests, at least in part because so many women and minority members were instrumental in it but are often written out of history. By way of one example, the author considers the case of a woman named Lucy Parsons, who grew up enslaved in the South and, with a husband who had fought for the Confederacy but later converted to anarchism, helped organize workers around the Haymarket riots of 1886. Sadly, Parsons refused to acknowledge her ethnicity and “focused her energies solely on behalf of white factory workers.” Nonetheless, Black activists were essential to working people’s efforts to secure better conditions, as Parsons was to gaining the eight-hour workday. Here Kelly examines the militancy of Mohawk ironworkers who helped build the skyscrapers of 1920s New York, “walking across two-inch-thick beams hundreds of feet in the air without so much as a tremble,” and of the multiethnic Coalition for Immokalee Workers, which exposed what amounted to slave labor on Southern farms in our own time. Injustices continue, from coal miners to immigrant workers bound to company stores and housing in Midwestern meatpacking plants. “Collective working class power was behind every stride forward this country has made,” Kelly writes in an urgent closing section, “grudgingly or otherwise, and will continue to be the animating force behind any true progress.” A well-reasoned argument for restoring unions to their former role in the lives of American workers. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Labor journalist Kelly looks back to the early days of U.S. industrialization in this freshly inclusive review of the country’s labor history. Beginning with the mill girls of Rhode Island and Massachusetts in 1824, she moves forward chronologically, providing insightful glimpses into dozens of strikes, union actions, and bloody confrontations. Kelly purposefully highlights events involving often overlooked groups, including Indigenous, Black, Hispanic, and Asian American women. Readers will also find famous episodes covered, such as the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire and the Haymarket massacre, but the emphasis is on people and events that remain relatively unknown. Kelly’s well-documented research and straightforward writing style allow her to pack an enormous amount of material into these pages, but the narrative never reads as dull or dense. Moving from one topic to another—miners to harvesters to cleaners—she provides a concise but comprehensive narrative that serves as an excellent entry point for new understanding of work in America. With union movements enjoying renewed support and influence, readers will find a lot of value in this previously "untold" history.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kelly's sweeping history of the American labor movement casts a wide swath from the trailblazing Pawtucket women weavers' mill turnout in 1824, to the 2020 effort to organize Amazon warehouse workers in Bessemer, AL. Focusing on women and workers of color, invariably low-paid physical laborers, Kelly's episodic survey details workplace contributions of usually ignored but essential folk. She marches with fiery Jewish girls in New York's garment district, with women on the picket lines of southern mills, and with Black workers in Appalachian mines. She reaches across the country, covering disabled workers, sex workers, and prisoners' work, and the diversified labor of Asian, Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Pacific Islander workers, particularly immigrants, in the fields and factories and on the rails and roads. S Kelly lauds revolutionaries and freedom fighters across class, gender, and race lines (Lucy Parsons; Mother Jones; Dr. Marie Equi; Cesar Chavez; Dorothy Lee Bolden) as vanguard workers who pushed for change in working conditions, psychology, and in society to redress capitalism's cruelties. VERDICT This accessible, inspiring, and instructive read belongs in school libraries, in university classrooms, and in general readers' hands for its lessons about workers' united power and the unfinished business of workplace justice.—Thomas J. Davis

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