Compras Nikon Bluetooth |
Frazer presents opinions and accounts of events from every side of the conflict. Frazer attempts to be unbiased in his presentation of the views of fascists side-by-side those of ultra-leftists--a helpful contrast to the histories written by anarchists, which are about the only accounts I have found of the collectives of Catalonia and Aragon. I imagine that most who have read this book were sympathizers of the revolutionaries and were, like I, eager to hear what life was like in revoltutionary Spain. I can't imagine this book disappointed them. The accounts of the rural collectives and of the collectization of industry in Barcelona and other cities are amoung the most vivid and moving that I have read. No one interested in this time and place--and I wish more people were!--should pass up this book.
By the way, there is a fanastic documentary called "The Spanish Civil War" that is very hard to come by, but which would be an excellent companion to this book. Although I have not confirmed it, the person who loaned me "Blood of Spain" (which I am happily buying at the time of writing this review) thought that Ronald Frazer produced the documentary as well. This would not surprise me, because, like the book, it is filled with interviews of participants, and it was produced around the same time the book was written... both done just in time: many of the interviewed probably died soon-after, and very few are still alive to be interviewed again. How much irredeemably poorer our collective memory would be without Frazer's preservation.
Economics is extremely useful as a form of employment for economists.
-- John Kenneth Galbraith
The state of innocence contains the germs of all future sin.
-- Alexandre Arnoux, "Etudes et caprices"