This is not a history book, it is an examination of labor disputes, tactics and strategy. It is a bit of a slow read, but it is important history; too bad we are not taught this history in school or even college/university (unless specializing in labor history). 1877-1921 was a volatile time in this country. This book taught me a lot I didn't know, but the most striking piece, was the military forces who looked the other way during Reconstruction in the south, left the south to commit genocide in the west to clear the land of indigenous for further colonization and business expansion, then murdered striking railroad workers...I don't mean the same military organization, but the exact same officers, soldiers.
I recommend this book to anyone who wants to understand missed opportunists for economic equality, early examples of interracial worker organizing (men and women), and especially, anyone who is dissatisfied with the watered down history they may have learned in school.