Check out titles from Mandy Carter, Nicholas Walter, Matt Meyer, Mariarosa Dalla Costa, Silvia Federici, Erica Lagalisse, Raoul Vaneigem, Victoria Law, Iain McIntyre, Voline, Michelle Cruz Gonzales, Eric Drooker,John P. Clark, Wess Harris,and so many more.
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Explore our eBooks HERE or click on the covers below.
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Editor: Iain McIntyre
This anthology brings forth the lost voices of Hobohemia.
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Judith Suissa
A philosophical account of the neglected tradition of anarchist thought on education.
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Editors: Elizabeth Betita Martínez, Mandy Carter, and Matt Meyer
A collection of articles from scholars and activists exploring the major points of intersection between white supremacy and the war machine and what needs to be done.
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Victor Serge · Edited by Mitchell Abidor
Anarchists Never Surrender anthologizes Serge’s previously unavailable texts on anarchism and fleshes out the portrait of this brilliant writer and thinker.
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Richard Parry
The Bonnot Gang were the most notorious French anarchists ever, and as bank expropriators the inventors of the motorized “getaway.” It is the story of how the anarchist taste for illegality developed into illegalism.
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Editors: Alexis Pauline Gumbs, China Martens, and Mai’a Williams
Inspired by the legacy of radical and queer black feminists of the 1970s and ‘80s, this anthology centers around mothers of color and marginalized mothers' voices.
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Juliana “Jewels” Smith • Illustrated by Ronald Nelson
An unflinching visual and literary tour-de-force on the most pressing issues of the day— including gentrification, police violence, and housing—with humor and biting satire.
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Jenny Brown
In the U.S., women have not yet realized their potential bargaining position. When they do, it will lead to new strategies for winning full access to abortion and birth control, and for improved working conditions for parents.
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Silvia Federici
This volume collects forty years of research and theorizing on the nature of housework, social reproduction, and women’s struggles on this terrain—to escape it, to better its conditions, to reconstruct it.
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J. Sakai
Settlers uncovers the collaboration between capitalism and white workers and their organizations, as well as their neocolonial allies, showing how the U.S. was designed from the ground up as a parasitic and genocidal entity.
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Editor and translator: Mitchell Abidor
Death to Bourgeois Society tells the story of four young anarchists who were guillotined in France in the 1890s: Ravachol, Auguste Vaillant, Emile Henry, and the Italian immigrant Santo Caserio.
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John P. Clark
Between Earth and Empire explores specific examples to present a vision of hope for social and ecological regeneration.
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Rachel Pollack
A colorful mix of science fiction, magic realism, memoir, and myth exploring themes of spirituality and transformation. Courage and cowardice contend in a literary odyssey unlike any other.
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Gord Hill
This slim volume chronicles the resistance by Indigenous peoples, which limited and shaped the forms and extent of colonialism.
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Selma James
Spanning six decades, Selma James's work set a new political perspective for millions of unwaged women, redefining the working class to include sectors previously dismissed as marginal.
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Erica Lagalisse • Foreword: Barbara Ehrenreich
Uses primary and secondary sources to set straight the history of the Left and illustrate the relationship between revolutionism, pantheistic occult philosophy, and the clandestine fraternity.
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David Pilgrim
This book introduces readers to the Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia, a collection of more than ten thousand contemptible collectibles that are used to engage visitors in intense and intelligent discussions about race.
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Ursula K. Le Guin
Le Guin gives voice to objects that may not speak a human language but communicate with us nevertheless through and about the seasonal rhythms of the earth, the minute and the vast, the ordinary and the mythological.
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Patrick Reinsborough and Doyle Canning
Re:Imagining Change is an inspirational inside look at the trailblazing methodology developed by the Center for Story-based Strategy over fifteen years of their movement building partnerships.
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Marge Piercy
Originally published in 1979, Vida is Marge Piercy's classic bookend to the '60s. Vida is full of the pleasures and pains, the experiments, disasters, and victories of an extraordinary band of people.
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