In the spirit of Labour Day, i.e. to celebrate the recognition of worker’s rights, I am highlighting three novels with a theme of trade unions and the labour movement.
GB84 by
David Peace
“Peace, a tremendously amiable Yorkshireman named last year [2003] as one of Granta’s 30 Best of Young British writers, has a style instantly recognisable to fans of James Ellroy and John Dos Passos. He builds a perfect sense of time and place by interspersing his narrative with diaries, newspaper reports, dreams, grocery lists.” – The Observer (UK)
Germinal
by Emile Zola
While it is a dramatic novel of working life and everyday relationships, Germinal is also a complex novel of ideas, given fresh vigor and power in this new translation. It is also the thirteenth book in the Rougon-Macquart cycle, which celebrates its centenary in October 1993 with a new film version of Germinal starring Gerard Depardieu.” – publisher
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists
by Robert Tressell
It is both a masterpiece of wit and political passion and one of the most authentic novels of English working class life ever written.” – publisher
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2011/09/3-labour-day-novels-classic-lit.html