booksthatgoboom, to sciencefiction
@booksthatgoboom@nerdculture.de avatar

Okay, well here we go. I never quite got the hang of Twitter, but here I am because I like what Mastodon stands for and I want to find a community of lovers and/or other types. Greetings Mastodon and and in particular my people.

MikeDunnAuthor, to 13thFloor

Today in Labor History October 13, 1902: Teddy Roosevelt threatened to send in federal troops as strikebreakers to crush a coal strike. The strike by anthracite coal miners in eastern Pennsylvania was led by the United Mineworkers of America (UMWA). The region had had dozens of previous strikes led by earlier and now defunct unions like the WBA. The UMWA was created 12 years prior, when the Knights of Labor Assembly merged with the National Progressive Miners Union. Over 100,000 miners participated in the strike, threatening to cut off heating fuel for most of the country. It was also the first strike settled by federal arbitration. The miners won a 9-hour work day (down from 10) and a 10% wage increase.

This was the same region where, in 1877, 20 Irish union activists were hanged on false charges of Molly Maguire terrorism to crush the WBA, brought on by the shenanigans of agent provocateur James McParland, working for the Pinkertons. That struggle is depicted in my novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill, which you can purchase here: https://www.thehistoricalfictioncompany.com/michael-dunn

@bookstadon

MikeDunnAuthor, to IWW

Today in Labor History November 5, 1916: The Everett Massacre occurred in Everett, Washington. 300 IWW members arrived by boat in Everett to help support the shingle workers’ strike that had been going on for the past 5 months. Prior attempts to support the strikers were met with vigilante beatings with axe handles. As the boat pulled in, Sheriff McRae called out, “Who’s your leader?” The Wobblies answered, “We’re all leaders!” The sheriff pulled his gun and said, “You can’t land.” A Wobbly yelled back, “Like hell we can’t.” Gunfire erupted, most of it from the 200 vigilantes on the dock. When the smoke cleared, two of the sheriff’s deputies were dead, shot in the back by their own men, along with 5-12 Wobblies on the boat. Dozens more were wounded. The authorities arrested 74 Wobblies. After a trial, all charges were dropped against the IWW members. The event was mentioned in John Dos Passos’s “USA Trilogy.”

#WorkingClass #LaborHistory #IWW #anarchism #Everett #massacre #vigilantes #police #PoliceVioence #PoliceMurder #union #strike #books #fiction #novel #writer #author @bookstadon

UnCoveredMyths, to disabled
@UnCoveredMyths@autistics.life avatar

I am a , multi-disabled

I write a variety of topics. Fiction and NonFiction.

Check my (Gail, Abby, AbaGail) books on: https://uncoveredmyths.wixsite.com/uncoveredmyths

Check my short stories on: https://uncoveredmyths.wixsite.com/uncoveredmyths/gailsshortstories Some of these are currently available, others waiting to publish.

I even have a fantasy short story out, among science fiction, disability fiction, speculative, dystopia, and hopepunk. Novels range the genres as well.

BZBrainz, to Autism
@BZBrainz@mastodonbooks.net avatar

@audhd @bookstodon
I’m proud of the 4.5 star reviews! Thank you all.

Late-Identified : A Starter Workbook is a workbook written and designed by me—a real person with late identified and . It is not meant to be diagnostic! It is meant for adults who are early in their self-discovery of what it means to be and have ADHD. @Adhdinos

➡️ https://books2read.com/audhd

MikeDunnAuthor, to IWW

Today in Labor History March 12, 1912: The IWW won their Bread and Roses textile strike in Lawrence, MA. This was the first strike to use the moving picket line, implemented to avoid arrest for loitering. The workers came from 51 different nationalities and spoke 22 different languages. The mainstream unions, including the American Federation of Labor, all believed it was impossible to organize such a diverse workforce. However, the IWW organized workers by linguistic group and trained organizers who could speak each of the languages. Each language group got a delegate on the strike committee and had complete autonomy. Big Bill Haywood and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn masterminded the strategy of sending hundreds of the strikers' hungry children to sympathetic families in New York, New Jersey, and Vermont, drawing widespread sympathy, especially after police violently stopped a further exodus. 3 workers were killed by police during the strike. Nearly 300 were arrested.

The 1911 verse, by Poet James Oppenheim, has been associated with the strike, particularly after Upton Sinclair made the connection in his 1915 labor anthology, “The Cry for Justice: An Anthology of the Literature of Social Protest”

As we come marching, marching, we battle too for men,
For they are women's children, and we mother them again.
Our lives shall not be sweated from birth until life closes;
Hearts starve as well as bodies; give us bread, but give us roses!

@bookstadon

sfwrtr, (edited ) to 13thFloor
@sfwrtr@eldritch.cafe avatar

2/2 Poll Intro There are "Edit" notification settings in the Notification column of your instance web app for Mastodon. This notifies you if a post you starred or boosted was modified by the poster.

Question Do you get upset when someone modifies their post? Please take a moment to explain what you think in a reply.

Please boost for the widest possible sample size.

:

MikeDunnAuthor, to india

Today in Labor History December 3, 1984: A methyl isocyanate leak from a Union Carbide plant in Bhopal, India, killed over 3,800 people and injured up to 600,000 more. Up to 16,000 people died, in total, over the years following the disaster. The Government of Madhya Pradesh has paid compensation to family members of 3,787 of the victims killed. Numerous local activist groups emerged to support the victims of the disaster, like Rashida Bee and Champa Devi Shukla, who won the Goldman Prize in 2004. Many of the activists were subjected to violent repression by the police and government. Larger international groups, like Greenpeace and Pesticide Action Network also got involved. The disaster has played a role in numerous works of fiction, including Arundhati Roy’s “The Ministry of Utmost Happiness” (2017) and Indra Sinha’s “Animal’s People” (2007). It has also been referenced in music by the Revolting Cocks “Union Carbide” and the Dog Faced Hermans ”Bhopal.”

@bookstadon

johnhowesauthor, to random

The prompts for December are ready, I hope you have fun with some of these. 🎅

A text version can be found on my blog here:

https://johnahowes.blogspot.com/p/mastodon-writers-coffee-club-daily_13.html

As ever, if you have any prompt ideas for future months, please let me know. I currently only have enough until March. ☃️❄️

MikeDunnAuthor, to environment

Today in Labor History September 27, 1962: Rachel Carson's book Silent Spring was published, ushering in the modern environmental movement and the creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

@bookstadon

inkican, to books
@inkican@mastodon.social avatar

IMO, it was game over for Goodreads as soon as Amazon bought them...

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2023/dec/18/goodreads-review-bombing

MikeDunnAuthor, to Columbia

Today in Labor History December 5, 1928: The Colombian military slaughtered up to 2,000 people in the Banana Massacre. Workers had been on strike against United Fruit Company since November 12. They were participating in a peaceful demonstration, with their wives and children. The Columbian troops set up machine guns on the rooftops near the demonstration and closed off the access streets so no one could escape. The soldiers threw the dead into mass graves or dumped them in the sea. U.S. officials in Colombia had portrayed the workers as communists and subversives and even threatened to invade if the Colombian government didn’t protect United Fruit’s interests. Gabriel García Márquez depicted the massacre in his novel “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” as did Álvaro Cepeda Samudio in his “La Casa Grande.”

United Fruit, which is now called Chiquita, controlled vast quantities of territory in Central America, and the Caribbean, maintained a near monopoly in many of the banana republics in which it operated (e.g., Honduras, Guatemala, Costa Rica). By 1930, it was the largest employer in Central America and the largest land owner. In 1952, the government of Jacobo Arbenz, in Guatemala, began giving away unused land, owned by United Fruit, to landless peasants. In 1954, the CIA deposed the Arbenz government, leading to decades of brutal dictatorship and genocide of Guatemala’s indigenous population. The head of the CIA at that time was former board member of United Fruit, Allen Dulles, who also oversaw the over throw of the democratically elected prime minister of Iran, the Bay of Pigs invasion, and the MK Ultra LSD mind control experiments.

@bookstadon

kristawalshauthor, to writing

Hello!

With Threads here, I wanted to give Mastadon another try.

How are you on this lovely Sunday?

LukaszOlejnik, to Cybersecurity
@LukaszOlejnik@mastodon.social avatar

My book 'PROPAGANDA: from disinformation and influence to operations and information warfare' treats the subject adequately, comprehensively, broadly, expertly. Information surrounds us. How does information influence work? An expert arrangement of the subject. https://blog.lukaszolejnik.com/propaganda-my-book-on-information-security/

MikeDunnAuthor, to IWW

Today in Labor History November 26, 1911: Paul Lafargue, Cuban-French revolutionary and son-in-law of Karl Marx, died. Lafargue wrote “The Right to Be Lazy” in 1893 while in prison. Lafargue had Jewish, French, Indian, Creole and African ancestry. When IWW cofounder Daniel De Leon asked him about his origins, he replied that he was proudest of his “negro” ancestry. In his youth, Lefargue participated in the International Students Congress in 1865. Consequently, the government banned him from all French universities. So, he moved to London, where he became a frequent visitor to Marx’s house, ultimately marrying his daughter, Laura. Lafargue was a member of the General Council of the First International. He also participated in the Paris Commune.

@bookstadon

NickEast, to Writers
@NickEast@geekdom.social avatar
ashtardeza, to Horror
@ashtardeza@mas.to avatar

I kind of suck at the self promotion, but here goes. My debut novella: Only the Living Feel Remorse.

It features a friendship gone sour, a haunting by a vengeful ghost, and a desperate man engaging in dark rituals at a horrible cost to himself and others.

https://books2read.com/b/only-the-living

https://ko-fi.com/s/42f072a6f2

BBCRadio4, to literature

"We’re performing a version of ourselves that people mistake for us, but it’s not actually us. We are more than that little avatar."

Naomi Klein: Eight things we learnt when she spoke to Kirsty Young on Young Again - Read more https://bbc.in/3Mkwovc

ashtardeza, (edited ) to Horror
@ashtardeza@mas.to avatar

So, it's here: my debut novella!

Only the Living Feel Remorse: A Ghost Story

A story about a friendship gone sour, a haunting by a vengeful ghost, and a desperate man engaging in dark rituals at a horrible cost to himself and others.

Now available through all major online retailers, and on my Ko-Fi.

I also post weekly chapters on my blog to read for free.

https://books2read.com/b/only-the-living

https://ko-fi.com/s/42f072a6f2

ashtardeza, to Horror
@ashtardeza@mas.to avatar

So, I designed these tiny book-shaped business cards as promo items for my novella, and they came out really well 🥰

Looking forward to handing these out!

floofpaldi, to writing

Big update and news for everyone participating in the group. The following link has all the past questions and will be updated nightly with the future ones for anyone new to our community.

This will be on my profile in my links (and the post will be pinned as well) for everyone to find.

Here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1QpBBOo29o2KVunJE9YR-NtJ7I3X3V9RzaC9chxQzC7M/edit?usp=sharing

Have fun. :11111:

cyborg_writer, to books
@cyborg_writer@writing.exchange avatar
UnCoveredMyths, to Writers

check your sites well.

The blocking craze is going strong.

Yesterday, one market called an AI and does not want your work if you use spell check. Doesn't every use spell (and grammar) check?

Another claims if they suspect the story is AI, they will block your email, and not even reply or verify.

, , , cognitively disabled, and people for whom English is a second language will be left forever waiting on a reply.

MikeDunnAuthor, (edited ) to books

Today in Labor History August 14, 1791: Dutty Boukman led a Vodou ceremony with enslaved people from Saint Domingue plantations that led to the start of the Haitian Revolution, the largest slave uprising since the Spartacist revolt against the Romam empire. Boukman was born in Senegambia. His name, Boukman, came from the English “Book Man,” because he not only knew how to read, but taught other enslaved people how to read. He, and priestess Cécile Fatiman, had led a series of meetings with enslaved people prior to August 14 to organized and plan for the uprising. Boukman was killed by French troops a few months into the revolution. Trinidadian Marxist writer C. L. R. James wrote the best book on the Haitian Revolution: “The Black Jacobins,” (1938). Also, be sure to check out the wonderful music of the contemporary Haitian pop group, Boukman Eksperyans, named for the Haitian revolutionary, Dutty Boukman. A fictionalized version of Boukman plays the title character in Guy Endore's novel “Babouk,” an anti-capitalist parable about the Haitian Revolution.

@bookstadon

HeliaXyana, to books
@HeliaXyana@mastodon.nl avatar

#reading #author #writing #writingcommunity #ebooks #books #bookstodon #privacy

Please help.

I am looking for the most privacy friendly way to buy ebooks.

Every shop and platform I've looked at would index and sell my purchase and a lot of other information.

I can get my ebooks in different ways but I explicitly want to pay the author for their work without me and my behavior ending up a resell product for which ever platform I use to complete this purchase.

Any ideas?

HeliaXyana,
@HeliaXyana@mastodon.nl avatar

@Firlefanz

Ah I had not considered that yet.

Would love a way to directly purchase from authors on a privacy friendly platform.

Seems to me to be the only way to liberate the reading world from big tech.

It's not too hard to imagine some sort of with purchasing options?

There must be something out there...

Really prefer to pay with money instead of my privacy.

Again, if any one has any ideas?

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