I had enjoyed the newspaper as a youth and wondered what had happened to the organization. After all the stuff about the author of Black Flame, I saw this in a bookstore and remembered how Love and Rage had really changed the way North American anarchists thought about "race" and what we now call "intersectionality" ... then I saw that there were a few articles in here from Joel Olson and I snapped it up.
This a painful book, actually... in the background we know L&R put out a great newspaper, changed a lot of thinking, and was active in important ways in supporting the anti-gulf war movement, SLAM and other CUNY activists, the Zapatistas, and of course Anti-Racist Action but the texts in here focus not on their practical work but rather on internal debates about the structure of the organization, its goals and its strategy and tactics. Its a whirlwind whose centrifugal forces spelled the end of the group.
I often meet anarchists and radical leftists who say that the world has changed so much that we need new forms of organization. Maybe. Definitely groups that are mostly white boys need more critical race theory and feminism, that's for damn sure. But what I really got from this book is that reinventing the wheel is no easy task and people who want to start something totally new might want to check this book out so they know what they are getting into.
There are a lot of points on various sides of a diverse set of debates in here and it will take me a long time to decide where I really stand on many of them. But that's a great thing! Thanks to AK Press and Roy San Filippo for putting all this in one volume and organizing it in some way.