AnthonyHarold, to bookstodon
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My Writing Journey [Part 1 of 50🤣].

Hi! I'm Anthony Harold, and now I can say that I’m a .

I’ve worked in the industry for 15 years & 15 more in real estate. But at 49, I decided to change my life and write a book.

My wife & editor Elena is a saint😅. She told me 10 months ago that we'd need at least a year to finish the first in my series, and I told her not to spread negative vibes🤣 So I hope, two more months & we'll be there💪🏻 @bookstodon

Let’s connect!

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History November 4, 1839: The Newport Rising began. It was the last large-scale armed rebellion against authority in mainland Britain. It began when approximately 4,000 Chartists, led by John Frost, marched on the town of Newport. When several were arrested, other Chartists, including coal miners, many armed with homemade weapons, marched on the Westgate Hotel (where they were held) to liberate them. Up to 24 were killed when soldiers were ordered to open fire on them. The Chartists were fighting for the adoption of the People’s Charter, which called for universal suffrage, the secret ballot, and the right of regular working people to serve in the House of Commons. Three leaders of the uprising were sentenced to death, but popular protests got their sentences commuted to Transportation for Life, probably to Australia or Van Dieman’s Land (Tasmania). America’s first cop, Allan Pinkerton, supposedly participated in this rebellion. He was a known Chartist in those days, a physical force man who loved to battle cops and Tory thugs. Because of his history of street violence and vandalism, he had to flee Britain in the dark of the night, ultimately settling in Illinois, where he eventually set up the private detective agency that would go on to murder numerous union organizers, and set up hundreds more for long prison stints through the use of agents provocateur and perjured testimonies.

The riots were depicted in the following novels: “Sir Cosmo Digby,” by James Augustus St John (1843), “Rape of the Fair Country,” by Alexander Cordell (1959) and “Children of Rebecca,” by Vivien Annis Bailey (1995).

@bookstadon

Julian_Invictus, to random
@Julian_Invictus@pagan.plus avatar

It's been a while since I worked on my set in the alternate Crimson Red Timeline. After reading the six chapters I have so far, I decided to do some planning to make future chapters easier.

First, I did some lineups for the Gym Leaders. Then, I drafted the lineup Red will use at each major City. Some time tomorrow, if I am not too busy, I will do the same for both Blue and Green so I know where they're at each time they pop up in the story.

The story doesn't require too many extra characters, as I focus on incorporating the Pokemon as characters. It's important because Red is written to be Autistic and is reserved around most people, but very comfortable opening up to his Pokemon.

If you want to catch up on the story so far, before I start cranking out more regular updates, here is the link: https://tinyurl.com/3bxy6txr

MonadicBlurbs, to bookstodon
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Here's what I'm reading right now in between doing review swaps with other !

What are y'all reading right now? Drop them in the comments!

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History November 3, 1793: French playwright, journalist and feminist Olympe de Gouges was guillotined during the Reign of Terror (1793–1794) for attacking the regime of the Revolutionary government and for her association with the Girondists. Her writings on women's rights and abolitionism reached a large audience in many different countries. She was also an outspoken advocate against the slave trade in the French colonies. In her Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Female Citizen (1791), she challenged the practice of male authority and the notion of male-female inequality.

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NickEast, to writers
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NickEast, to fantasybookstodon
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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History October 26, 1892: Ida B. Wells published “Southern Horrors: Lynch Law in All Its Phases,” which led to threats against her life, and the burning down of her newspaper’s headquarters in Memphis. Wells, who was born into slavery, was a journalist, educator, feminist, and early Civil Rights leader who helped found the NAACP.

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NickEast, to writers
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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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ANYWHERE BUT SCHUYLKILL

This is a great labor novel, as good as any I have read. Given the current revival of pro-union sentiments, from Starbucks to Amazon to General Motors, I hope it will be widely read.

-reviewed by William P. Meyers, iii Publishing

Available now from Historium Press https://www.thehistoricalfictioncompany.com/michael-dunn

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History October 21, 1981: Kuwasi Balagoon was finally captured following a Brinks robbery. Balagoon had been a member of the Black Panther Party. While in prison, he became disillusioned with the Panthers, became an anarchist and joined the more militant Black Liberation Army. He escaped from prison twice. In 1979, while on the lam from his second prison escape, he helped to free political prisoner Assata Shakur, who fled to Cuba and lives there to this day. In 1986, he died in prison from AIDS. In 2019, PM Press released a collection of writings by and about Balagoon called, “Kuwasi Balagoon: A Soldier's Story.” And the prison abolitionist group, Black and Pink, which supports LGBTQ and HIV-positive prisoners, has, since 2020, run a "Kuwasi Balagoon award" for those living with HIV/AIDS.

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History October 20, 1895: Anarcho-syndicalist writer Gaston Leval, active in the Spanish Civil War, was born in France. He was the son of a French Communard. He escaped to Spain in 1915 to avoid conscription during WWI. Then left for Argentina during the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera where he lived from 1923 to 1936. He returned to Spain and became a militant fighter, and where he documented the revolution and the urban and rural anarchist collectives.

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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NickEast, to writingcommunity
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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History October 15, 2005: A planned Nazi march in Toledo, Ohio sparked a 4-hour riot by counter-protesters, including anarchists, the International Socialist Organization, and Anti-Racist Action. Aggression was directed against the police, who initially protected the Nazis, but then later escorted them out of town. However, in December, 700 police, with armored personnel carriers and rooftop snipers, protected Nazis, allowing them to complete a rally, despite massive opposition.

For more on the history of Anti-Racist Action, and other anti-fascist movements of the 70s-90s, read “We Go Where They Go,” by Shannon Clay, Lady, Kristin Schwartz, and Michael Staudenmaier, and “No Fascist USA!” by Hilary Moore and James Tracy.

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THEDAILYHAIKU, to random
@THEDAILYHAIKU@mastodon.world avatar

SLOW RENGA WEDNESDAY 11/10/23 Start each with the same first lines below: ENDLESS SKY… or SUCH BEAUTY… Post haiku in comments, as ever enjoy mulling over the first line & considering your options at different points during the evening or day depending on your time zone. Look forward to reading your haiku - seeing where these lines take you.

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History October 9, 1936: A lettuce strike had recently ended in Salinas, California. However, when red flags went up throughout town, the authorities feared communist agitators had returned and removed the red flags, only to find out later that they were part of a traffic check being done by the state highway division.

The first effective organizing in the Salinas Valley began in 1933, with the mostly female lettuce trimmers demanding equal pay to the men. The Filipino field workers supported the women’s demands. In 1934, members of the Filipino Labor Union (FLU) struck the lettuce farms. So, the farmers brought in Mexican and Anglo scabs. They used vigilante mobs and the cops to violently attack the strikers and arrested their leaders. When the Filipino Labor Union and the Mexican Labor Union joined forces, a mob of vigilantes burned their labor camp down and drove 800 Filipinos out of the Salinas Valley at gunpoint. The 1934 strike ended soon after, with the growers recognizing the FLU and offering a small raise. This violence inspired John Steinbeck to write “In Dubious Battle” and “Grapes of Wrath,” for which he won both Pulitzer and Nobel Prizes.

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
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Today in Labor History October 9, 1874: Mary Heaton Vorse was born. Vorse was a labor journalist who participated in and wrote eyewitness accounts of many of the significant labor battles of her day. In the 1910s, she was the founding editor of the “Masses,” as well as an activist in the suffrage and women’s peace movements. In 1912, she participated in and wrote about the Lawrence textile strike. She helped organize the Wobblies’ unemployment protest in New York, 1914, and was good friends with Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. In 1916, she reported on the IWW Mesabi Range strike. And in 1919, she worked as a publicist for the Great Steel Strike. She also wrote the novel, "Strike!" about the 1929 textile mill strike, in Gastonia, North Carolina, which was made into a film in 2007.

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Roannasylver, to sffbookclub
@Roannasylver@wandering.shop avatar

💜So grateful to the amazing @lyssachiavari, author of the incredible Iamos Trilogy, for these lovely words about the Chameleon Moon ! Which drops this Halloween! 🎃

Check out pre-orders (with bonus goodies) over here! -> https://www.roannasylver.com

@bookstodon @fantasybookstodon @sffbookclub

KitMuse, to bookstodon
@KitMuse@eponaauthor.social avatar

Does anyone know is the Wiccan/Pagan Press Alliance still around?

Also, is there a directory for Wiccan/Pagan/Polytheist publications (fiction or nonfiction) which take submissions?

Was going through my old publications to update my CV for grad school and my article writing muse has awakened.

@bookstodon

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History October 6, 1900: English anarchist author Ethel Mannin was born in London. Her memoir of the 1920s, Confessions and Impressions was one of the first Penguin paperbacks. Her 1944 book Bread and Roses: A Utopian Survey and Blue-Print has been described as "an ecological vision in opposition to the prevailing and destructive industrial organization of society." Mannin protested imperialism in Africa during the 1930s. She was also very active in anti-fascist movements, including the Women's World Committee Against War and Fascism, and she supported the military actions of the Spanish Republic.

@bookstadon

Roannasylver, to random
@Roannasylver@wandering.shop avatar

💜 Been here almost a year, so! post 2.0!

🌈 I'm Ro, an and of really weird, (the CHAMELEON MOON and STAKE SAUCE series) as well as (DAWNFALL, THE GREAT BATSBY).

🤘 I'm a and creator, and tend to love other weird/queer things too!

🎃 I'm also a Norse , and dig witchy stuff in general!

🌙 All books and games are on RoAnnaSylver.com, and a thread o' books will follow!

MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History October 5, 1923: Swedish anarcho-syndicalist playwright & novelist Stig Dagerman was born. Over the course of 5 years, 1945–49, he wrote four successful novels, a collection of short stories, a book about postwar Germany, five plays, hundreds of poems and satirical verses, several essays and a large amount of journalism. He wrote the essay “Anarchism and Me” about his views on anarchism, and society, in post-World War 2 Europe. He killed himself in 1954, by running his car with the garage closed.

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MikeDunnAuthor, to bookstadon
@MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social avatar

Today in Labor History October 4, 1884: Japanese writer Jun Tsuji was born. He was a Dadaist, nihilist, Epicurean and shakuhachi musician. Early in his life, he was influenced by the works of Tolstoy, Kōtoku Shūsui's socialist anarchism, and the literature of Oscar Wilde and Voltaire. Later, he became a follower of Stirner’s individualist anarchism. His works were censored by the authorities and he was harassed by the police. His former wife, anarcho-feminist Itō Noe, was murdered by the military police in the Amakasu Incident in 1923, when the military police murdered her and lover, Ōsugi Sakae, an informal leader of the Japanese anarchist movement, along with Ōsugi's six-year-old nephew. During the weeks that followed the great Kantō earthquake, authorities and vigilantes arrested, beat, tortured thousands of dissidents, and murdered an estimated 6,000.

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arielkroon, to academicchatter
@arielkroon@wandering.shop avatar

In my latest article for Unsustainable Magazine, I unapologetically brought my research on to bear on our current . I hope it contributes to the discussion of how we react to the in a good way.

https://www.unsustainablemagazine.com/dread-of-climate-collapse/

@academicchatter

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