I have not finished reading this yet, but I was interested to see what other people thought of it. I started reading it years ago, but it is rather long and starts getting a bit repetitive, so I gave it up. I have started reading it again from the back so I can stop when I get to a bit I remember. It was a very influential book. My step-mother's father said that it persuaded him to join the Communist Party, and I believe it has been credited with winning the 1946 general election for Labour. It is set in about 1907 in a southern English town. It's about a group of painter-decorators. Unemployment is high, pay and conditions are very poor, and job security is non-existent. The main character is a man named Owen, who I reckon must be similar to the author. He is a painter-decorator with a side line in sign painting. He is a dedicated socialist, who constantly argues with his co-workers, trying to get them to see that they are being exploited by the capitalist system. He is exasperated by them because they continue to vote Liberal or Conservative and to defer to upper classes. Apart from the idle rich, the bosses and the foremen, he particularly despises the clergy, whom he considers are paid a lot for not doing very much. The main problems with the book in my opinion are that it is too long; the author lays on the social injustice a bit too thick, and it has a tendency to turn into a manifesto. It is still interesting though, because it is written by a working class author about working class people. The dialogue is very well written; so much so, that I wondered whether some were remembered conversations. It was written about hundred years ago just before socialist and communist revolutions started to take place, and also before Labour started to replace the Liberal Party as the main opposition to the Conservatives in Britain.


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