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⋙ Libro King Coal Upton Sinclair 9781466297432 Books

King Coal Upton Sinclair 9781466297432 Books



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Download PDF King Coal Upton Sinclair 9781466297432 Books

This anthology is a thorough introduction to classic literature for those who have not yet experienced these literary masterworks. For those who have known and loved these works in the past, this is an invitation to reunite with old friends in a fresh new format. From Shakespeare s finesse to Oscar Wilde s wit, this unique collection brings together works as diverse and influential as The Pilgrim s Progress and Othello. As an anthology that invites readers to immerse themselves in the masterpieces of the literary giants, it is must-have addition to any library.

King Coal Upton Sinclair 9781466297432 Books

I grew up in an iron ore mining hamlet in upstate New York during the 50's. There were several similarities and some differences between my town and the fictional-based on-true-to-life town of this novel. We did have a company store; the company owned the houses, yet they had the right to blast underneath those houses. We too had immigrants from all over: Lithuania, Russia, Italy, Poland, etc. I had heard that before my time, thee was a man who would pay the way for workers to come to work in the mine and the mill, and of course, they were indebted to this man until they paid him back. If a minor or millwright was injured or killed unless the family had a son or someone who could step in to work the family would turned out of the town. There was talk of brothels, fights and murders. The company controlled everything. By the time I was born things had improved somewhat. They built a good school, a town swimming pool, a large baseball field with bleachers, grand stand, band stand and food stand; and had brought in electricity and indoor plumbing for the most part. The first home I remember had only a kitchen sink for running water; there was no toilet, only a slop pail and my pink potty under my bed, (My mother was a fastidious cleaner, so there was never any odor), and Dad took showers at the mill, while ma gave me a bath in a big tub that hung on the kitchen wall. When my father had to work a double shift he would call my mother to make him another meal. When he arrived, usually around 11pm,he was so covered with soot, that my mother would not allow him to move from the door mat. In the dark living room I could make out his silhouette of clothes caked stiff with grease and soot, and the whites of his eyes. The hands of a minor or millwright were never clean; the whorls of fingerprints were embedded with dirt and grime. When a young man was sprayed with kerosene in the mill he survived for 6 long months of agony because there were no burn centers, Men donated skin grafts to no avail. His wife and two little girls survived him; and his wife ended up in what I believe was probably a loveless marriage because there had to be a wage-earner in the household. In those days most women were homemakers, and had no job outside the home. Other men died, too. One was blown to pieces, and one of his work buddies tossed his body parts up with nervous laughter. Another man had wanted to visit family in Utah so he worked
extras shifts. He was killed on such a shift. Men would run along side the mammoth Euclid trucks yelling, "bombing; go inside. On one such time a
huge boulder went through a family's roof! Fortunately, no one was injured. So, yes, this book tells a true picture of what happens in a mining town,
whether it be iron ore or coal. It focused a lot on unions which I am not familiar with. But living with danger was a way of life, and death. There were people that made life easier, as I stated, that brought electricty an indoor plumbing to the town; but I am not aware of anyone like the protagonist, Hal Warner, who came in as an outsider and wanted to help.

Product details

  • Paperback 230 pages
  • Publisher CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (September 19, 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 1466297433

Read King Coal Upton Sinclair 9781466297432 Books

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King Coal Upton Sinclair 9781466297432 Books Reviews


This book is another amazing realist novel by Upton Sinclair. It centers around conditions in the coal mines in the early 1900s. It is a riveting story which depicts elements of class struggle in a way that only Sinclair knows how.
Another great book by Upton Sinclair. It tells the story about how the rich got rich by manipulating humanity by treating them as slaves in a time when you would think this would never happen. A must read.
Excellent book based on thorough research. In a similar fashion to "The Jungle", it takes you to the mines and shows you the dark reality of the time.
I've always been a fan of Upton Sinclairs. I love all his stories.
Classic Sinclair. The “The Jungle” of coal mining. CW for dated sexist, racist, and classist language and themes. Free on !
A well crafted story that told both sides of the story, owners and workers, fairly well.

I actually read this because it was alluded to in a chapter of Mike Pollens book "An Omnivore's Dilemma" called "King Corn" which also does its best to tell both sides of the corn story.
I wasn't sure I was going to like this novel. I've been researching immigration and the coal industry in the USA, so I got it, and I found it to be riveting. Clearly, Sinclair has a journalist's eye, and he uses what novelists today might consider a clumsy device (bringing an upper-class young college student into the coal fields to do a sort of anthropological study of the workers and their circumstances), but he actually pulls it off quite well. The story was very readable and its message timely. It does not have the level of detail and character development as Zola's Germinal (which is also worth a read!) but it still offers intriguing insight into the Politics of Coal.
I grew up in an iron ore mining hamlet in upstate New York during the 50's. There were several similarities and some differences between my town and the fictional-based on-true-to-life town of this novel. We did have a company store; the company owned the houses, yet they had the right to blast underneath those houses. We too had immigrants from all over Lithuania, Russia, Italy, Poland, etc. I had heard that before my time, thee was a man who would pay the way for workers to come to work in the mine and the mill, and of course, they were indebted to this man until they paid him back. If a minor or millwright was injured or killed unless the family had a son or someone who could step in to work the family would turned out of the town. There was talk of brothels, fights and murders. The company controlled everything. By the time I was born things had improved somewhat. They built a good school, a town swimming pool, a large baseball field with bleachers, grand stand, band stand and food stand; and had brought in electricity and indoor plumbing for the most part. The first home I remember had only a kitchen sink for running water; there was no toilet, only a slop pail and my pink potty under my bed, (My mother was a fastidious cleaner, so there was never any odor), and Dad took showers at the mill, while ma gave me a bath in a big tub that hung on the kitchen wall. When my father had to work a double shift he would call my mother to make him another meal. When he arrived, usually around 11pm,he was so covered with soot, that my mother would not allow him to move from the door mat. In the dark living room I could make out his silhouette of clothes caked stiff with grease and soot, and the whites of his eyes. The hands of a minor or millwright were never clean; the whorls of fingerprints were embedded with dirt and grime. When a young man was sprayed with kerosene in the mill he survived for 6 long months of agony because there were no burn centers, Men donated skin grafts to no avail. His wife and two little girls survived him; and his wife ended up in what I believe was probably a loveless marriage because there had to be a wage-earner in the household. In those days most women were homemakers, and had no job outside the home. Other men died, too. One was blown to pieces, and one of his work buddies tossed his body parts up with nervous laughter. Another man had wanted to visit family in Utah so he worked
extras shifts. He was killed on such a shift. Men would run along side the mammoth Euclid trucks yelling, "bombing; go inside. On one such time a
huge boulder went through a family's roof! Fortunately, no one was injured. So, yes, this book tells a true picture of what happens in a mining town,
whether it be iron ore or coal. It focused a lot on unions which I am not familiar with. But living with danger was a way of life, and death. There were people that made life easier, as I stated, that brought electricty an indoor plumbing to the town; but I am not aware of anyone like the protagonist, Hal Warner, who came in as an outsider and wanted to help.
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