Introduction
Chapter 1. The Frozen Food Capital of the World
Chapter 2. The Biggest Union in the Country
Chapter 3. The Teamsters in Watsonville
Chapter 4. Local 912 at Bay
Chapter 5. The Strikers Committee
Chapter 7. The Shaw Settlement
Chapter 8. Enter the Teamsters
Chapter 9. Mort Console at Bay
Chapter 10. The Final Days
Epilogue
Reviews in Truthout, In These Times, Labor Notes, Labour/Le
Travail, Labor Studies Journal, New Left Review, Radical America,
Historical Materialism, International Socialist Review, Jacobin,
and other left-wing journals
Excerpt in Truthout or similar
Local radio appearances
Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking
engagements
Peter Shapiro: Peter Shapiro is a retired letter carrier and longtime labor journalist. His union paper was repeatedly honored during his tenure as editor, and he has published in Labor Notes, Labor Studies Journal, Unity, and The Nation.
“[W]ell-written, fast-paced, and inspiring....This masterpiece of
the genre is simultaneously an education in labor organizing in the
multinational workplace and a stirring tale of struggle by some of
U.S. capitalism’s most exploited workers….Haymarket Books, is
probably the best current publisher of labor history; with this
book both Haymarket and the author Peter Shapiro have outdone
themselves.”
—CounterPunch
"Peter Shapiro has written an important book of how 1,000 Latina
workers in Watsonville, California won an 18-month long strike in
the 1980s against one of the biggest canning companies in the
state. It is an inspiring tale about the unity and perseverance of
immigrant women against a corporation backed by big lawyers and a
big bank during high tide of Reagan-era union busting. But it is
much more—for labor activists and labor historians alike know that
while solidarity is critical, it is often not enough. Shapiro
offers keen insights into the complex world of this strike, in
which a vast array of players—the workers, Teamster union leaders
and their opposition, community and church activists, and Leftists
of various stripes—engaged in what Shapiro provocatively calls a
"laboratory" for different styles of leadership, and what these
meant for the workers’ desire to shape their own destiny."
—Mae M. Ngai, Author of Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the
Making of Modern America
"Peter Shapiro combines wonderful story telling with a sharp
historian's analysis to explain an important but little-known
corner of the US labor movement. Song of the Stubborn One Thousand
is a story of hope and inspiration. It's a must read for anyone
interested in the power of working people and minorities."
—Freelance journalist Reese Erlich, who covered the strike for the
Christian Science Monitor
"I’ve waited nearly 25-years for this book. Against all odds, for
18-months, the mostly Latina strikers sacrificed, built their
union, and no one crossed their picket line. With attention to
detail, patience, and most of all empathy Shapiro takes the readers
on the 18-month peregrination with the Stubborn One Thousand. This
is a book that every organizer needs to read."
—Fernando E. Gapasin, co-author of Solidarity Divided
“Peter Shapiro has written a powerful book about one of the most
important labor and civil rights battles since World War Two - the
Watsonville strike. He shows clearly that workers won because of
the interaction between the mostly Mexican immigrant strikers, the
reform movement in the Teamsters, and organizations and leaders on
the left. It was this synthesis, with all its problems, that gave
the strike its power, and has made it a touchstone for radical
strategy and tactics since. It is an inspiring story, told
skillfully through the eyes and words of its participants. Read
this book.”
—David Bacon, author of Children of NAFTA and Illegal People
“The cannery workers struggle chronicled by Peter Shapiro, in this
well-written and insightful book, occurred three decades ago. But
trade unionists of all kinds face similar challenges today whenever
they go on strike. Shapiro shows how workers faced with management
resistance and union ambivalence can overcome both with strong
rank-and-file leadership, independent shop-floor organization, and
active community support.”
—Steve Early, former organizer for Communications Workers of
America and author of Save Our Unions
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