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Urban Legendz
Paul Downs, Nick Bruno; Artworks by Michael Yates
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R202
Discovery Miles 2 020
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection. A group of young
vigilantes roam the streets of Brooklyn solving supernatural
crimes. After his mother’s death, Dwayne is forced to uproot
himself and move into the home where his mother grew up: a shabby
apartment in Brooklyn. When your dad is a police officer, and your
brother’s too cool for school, what's an insecure teen supposed
to do? Dwayne’s personal problems are cast aside when he joins a
new crew of young vigilantes, devoted to solving a series of
sinister cases surrounding mysterious monsters that have been
wreaking havoc throughout the city. What if all of the Urban
Legends we all fear...were real?
A growing inequality in income and wealth marks modern capitalism,
and it negatively affects nearly every aspect of our lives,
especially those of the working class. It is and will continue to
be the central issue of politics in almost every nation on earth.
In this book, the author explains inequality in clear, passionate,
and intelligent prose: what it is, why it matters, how it affects
us, what its underlying causes are, and what we might do about it.
This book was written to encourage informed radical action by
working people, the unemployed, and the poor, uniquely blending the
author's own experiences with his ability to make complex issues
comprehensible to a mass audience. This book will be excellent for
courses in a variety of disciplines, and it will be useful to
activists and the general reading public.
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Urban Legendz (Hardcover)
Nick Bruno, Paul Downs; Illustrated by Michael Yates
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R373
R274
Discovery Miles 2 740
Save R99 (27%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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After his mother's death, teen Dwayne is forced to uproot himself
and move into the home where his mother grew up: a shabby apartment
in Brooklyn. Overshadowed by his socially salient older brother,
and pressured by his policeman father, Dwayne often feels out of
place, a sentiment that is only intensified in these unfamiliar
surroundings. Before too long, however, his personal problems are
cast aside when he gets suckered into joining a new crew of young
vigilantes, devoted to solving a series of sinister cases
surrounding mysterious monsters that have been wreaking havoc
throughout the city.
The economic boom of the 1990s created huge wealth for the bosses,
but benefited workers hardly at all. At the same time, the bosses
were able to take the political initiative and even the moral high
ground, while workers were often divided against each other. This
new book by leading labor analyst Michael D. Yates seeks to explain
how this happened, and what can be done about it.
Essential to both tasks is "naming the system"the system that
ensures that those who do the work do not benefit from the wealth
they produce. Yates draws on recent data to show that the growing
inequalityglobally, and within the United Statesis a necessary
consequence of capitalism, and not an unfortunate side-effect that
can be remedied by technical measures. To defend working people
against ongoing attackson their working conditions, their living
standards, and their future and that of their childrenand to
challenge inequality, it is necessary to understand capitalism as a
system and for labor to challenge the political dominance of
capitalist interests.
Naming the System examines contemporary trends in employment and
unemployment, in hours of work, and in the nature of jobs. It shows
how working life is being reconfigured today, and how the effects
of this are masked by mainstream economic theories. It uses
numerous concrete examples to relate larger theoretical issues to
everyday experience of the present-day economy. And it sets out the
strategic options for organized labor in the current political
context, in which the U.S.-led war on terrorism threatens to
eclipse the anti-globalization movement.
A growing inequality in income and wealth marks modern capitalism,
and it negatively affects nearly every aspect of our lives,
especially those of the working class. It is and will continue to
be the central issue of politics in almost every nation on earth.
In this book, the author explains inequality in clear, passionate,
and intelligent prose: what it is, why it matters, how it affects
us, what its underlying causes are, and what we might do about it.
This book was written to encourage informed radical action by
working people, the unemployed, and the poor, uniquely blending the
author's own experiences with his ability to make complex issues
comprehensible to a mass audience. This book will be excellent for
courses in a variety of disciplines, and it will be useful to
activists and the general reading public.
Three one-act plays by Michael Yates. A REAL CUSHY NUMBER: It's the
night shift at a major hospital and the porters sip their hot tea
and talk about life as they wait for a patient to die. ALL GOOD
MEN: Party conference time - and the sudden death of the prime
minister triggers a power struggle as young speech-writer Simon
goes to war with ambitious minister Darius and sexy, ruthless
power-broker Lady Bridgewater. LUVVIES: A failed playwright and a
bit-part actress invite a young couple home for heavy drinking and
ritual humiliation - but the tables could be turned "Clever,
well-written. The punchy, bitchy dialogue is great fun with an
undercurrent of tragedy. It kept me hooked," said the Write Now
Liverpool Drama Festival judge.
In these six exciting stories, Branwell, the Bronte boy who ruled
an imaginary childhood world, has failed as poet and painter and
slips down the road of drink and despair; passionate Alice,
searching for a man she can love as she once loved her father,
ignores the desperate struggle of her daughter Maudie to make a
life of her own; idealistic Mr Berry, trapped in a dead-end job in
a failing boys' school, discovers the secret of an illiterate
11-year old, and is forced to re-examine his own life; John
Poulson, corrupt Yorkshire architect imprisoned for bribing his way
to success, determines to write a book to clear his name and
identify the guilty men; simple-minded Mel recalls his best pal
Adrian, killed in an accident, but fails to grasp the relationship
between Adrian and his own wife Beatrice; and 50 years ago in
Dallas, John F Kennedy narrowly escapes an assassin's bullet - and
goes on to change the course of history.
Three one-act plays by Michael Yates. LIFE SENTENCE: Hell hath no
fury like a woman scorned - especially when she has a meat cleaver
in her hand A dark comedy about the violent games lovers play.
Winner of the Stanley Arnold Trophy at Sheffield One-Act Play
Festival. TILL MY EYES BLEED: Loyal Mel hires the theatre to host a
wake for his best friend Adrian. But it becomes apparent - to
everyone except Mel - that Mel's wife had enjoyed a passionate
affair with Adrian. Will Mel guess the truth before the end of the
night? SUNDAY AFTERNOON AGAIN: Eight-year-old Lenny has two big
worries: His mum and dad are always fighting, and there's a wicked
witch living next door A poignant play about growing up, chosen for
Liverpool's Write Now One-Act Play Festival, and described by
critic Laurence Raw as "sharply observed... vividly demonstrates
how the past exerts a powerful influence over the present."
In this play, young Branwell Bronte, who once ruled an imaginary
world, is now a man, grown mad trying to cope with the real one.
Having failed as a poet and painter, as doomed in love as he is in
literature, he slips ever more quickly down the road of drink,
drugs and despair. His loving father Patrick and talented sister
Charlotte fight a last-ditch stand for his salvation, but it is
Branwell's sinister friend, gravedigger John Brown, who threatens
to have the last word in this ultimately terrifying take on the
brilliant family we have read so much about and all thought we knew
so well.
""A poet of the everyday world, he is consistently good"" says
Brian Patten. ""I like the humanity, the way his poems seem to be
full of real people feeling real emotions"" says Ian McMillan ""He
has an ear for popular diction reminiscent of Alan Bennett. His eye
for comic fiction reminds me of Roger McGough"" - Bradford
Telegraph & Argus
"When Yates and I first met and had dinner at the University of
Missouri, he was an undergraduate. His work was brilliant then.
This I told him and his department head. This Canticle for
Electronic Music underscores the acuity of my forecasting."-W.H.
Auden, The Quest "With great admiration for your work."--Joyce
Carol Oates "I appreciate this poet's concentration, swiftness,
density: his choice for the deeply personal utterance and that
only. He wastes no time with exercises, set themes, and other
conventional maneuvers."-Henry Rago, editor, Poetry. "He is violent
and unpredictable.has a wild, unconventional imagination."-James
Dickey "Dangerous minds investigate dangerous places in the mind.
Most of your work lives in these places."-Yehuda Amichai. "J.
Michael Yates is the most lively and original writer of his
generation."-Robin Skelton "I appreciate your keeping me out of
trouble almost as much as I appreciate your poetry." -Czeslaw
Milosz. "This young writer, unlike most, is fearless in matters of
dangerous themes and dialogue which will clearly come over the
lights."-Arthur Miller (as judge of Yates'Major Hopwood Award
winning manuscript, Subjunction.) "Michael Yates is a great poet
who has given us such a universe. I consider his The Great Bear
Lake Meditations to be by far the most ambitious and successful
meditative poem ever written in Canada."-Fred Cogswell
"When Yates and I first met and had dinner at the University of
Missouri, he was an undergraduate. His work was brilliant then.
This I told him and his department head. This Canticle for
Electronic Music underscores the acuity of my forecasting."-W.H.
Auden, The Quest "With great admiration for your work."--Joyce
Carol Oates "I appreciate this poet's concentration, swiftness,
density: his choice for the deeply personal utterance and that
only. He wastes no time with exercises, set themes, and other
conventional maneuvers."-Henry Rago, editor, Poetry. "He is violent
and unpredictable.has a wild, unconventional imagination."-James
Dickey "Dangerous minds investigate dangerous places in the mind.
Most of your work lives in these places."-Yehuda Amichai. "J.
Michael Yates is the most lively and original writer of his
generation."-Robin Skelton "I appreciate your keeping me out of
trouble almost as much as I appreciate your poetry." -Czeslaw
Milosz. "This young writer, unlike most, is fearless in matters of
dangerous themes and dialogue which will clearly come over the
lights."-Arthur Miller (as judge of Yates'Major Hopwood Award
winning manuscript, Subjunction.) "Michael Yates is a great poet
who has given us such a universe. I consider his The Great Bear
Lake Meditations to be by far the most ambitious and successful
meditative poem ever written in Canada."-Fred Cogswell
Big changes in the global economy and world politics have put new
questions on the table for labour movements around the world. Can
workers regain the initiative against the tidal wave of corporate
downsizing and government cutbacks? Is labour rising from the
ashes? Focusing upon recent developments in the United States, this
volume sets these decisive questions about labour against a global
backdrop, connecting and contrasting the new American scene to
recent developments abroad - from Mexico to Asia, from Canada to
Eastern Europe. It provides analysis of the key issues being
debated by labour scholars and activists: the changing composition
of the international working class; patterns of work under
contemporary capitalism; the relationship of race and gender to
class; the promise and limitations of recent eruptions of labour
militancy; and the strategic options available to the labour
movement in today's conditions.
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