Haymarket: A Novel by Martin Duberman [Review]
KSL | 11.11.2007 16:46 | Culture | History | Social Struggles
Through a mixture of straight narration and fictional documents like diaries and personal letters Duberman manages to transmit a huge amount of information while maintaining the pace of the book, and the reader's interest. Not only does he bring Lucy and Albert to life, but others outside the Haymarket eight like their close comrades Lizzie Swank and William Holmes.
The long view (the book begins with Lucy and Albert meeting in Texas in 1871) shows not only their personal history but the social context in a period of American history best described as open class warfare. The rich call for workers to be massacred, the police are an occupying force, and the courts a device for permanently silencing labour agitators. As Albert says:
"The prosecution wants to convict us of murder on the basis of our opposition to the current social order - for our political views - yet hails the Captain Bonfields, who have committed actual deeds of murder, as 'saviors of law and order.'"
If you're interested in the history of the Haymarket Affair, this is a good introduction which will give you an accurate idea of what happened. As fiction, it not only records the names of the dead, it gives them back their voices. Which is a victory of a kind.
Haymarket: A Novel by Martin Duberman
Seven Stories Press, 2003. ISBN 1583226184
Published in KSL: Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley Library, no. 50-51.
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