I loved reading this, though not necessarily because it was incredibly well-written. The writing was compelling, I think, if you were born in Appalachia or otherwise have a deep-seated appreciation of the style of Appalachian storytelling, which is evident in the book. Irrelevant details are thrown in, and there is an slightly-odd, consistent referencing of black miners as black, when white miners are not called "white miners," but just "miners." The point of this racial specificity in some cases and not others, is, rather clearly for one with my background, to call attention to the fact that black miners existed in West Virginia when their contributions have often been forgotten. But in 2013, and to someone who may not know all that, the phrasing is probably clumsy. The copy of this book I had also either suffered from some editing oversights, or words were left in an Appalachian colloquial on purpose; I'm not sure which, but I could forgive them easily if the intent were the latter. However, I am very proud of West Virginia's union heritage, from which I spring, and this book details key events in southern West Virginia's coal mining history. It's the only nonfiction book, I believe, that details the 1920-1921 mine war. In addition to the particulars of the miners' organizing and outmaneuvering of the coal companies on numerous occasions, I was also really struck by the reality of their failure on so many fronts, ultimately, and in the very, very creepy ways in which federal officials welcomed the mine war as a chance to test out/show off new weaponry, especially aerial, developed during WWI. I do think this should be required reading for anyone interested in labor history in the US.