Here are 2 books that They Came for the Schools fans have personally recommended if you like
They Came for the Schools.
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Dorothy B. Hughes wrote one of my favorite 20th century noirs, A Lonely Place. This less well known book, though published in 1963, had incredible resonance today based on where we are socially and politically--I can't say more than that because what gives it that resonance are several spoilers.
The critic HRF Keating chose The Expendable Man as one of his Crime & Mystery: The 100 Best Books. A late addition to the thirteen crime stories Dorothy B Hughes wrote with great success in one prolific spell between 1940 and 1952, it was, in his view, her best book. But it is far more than a crime novel. Just as her earlier books had engaged with the political issues of the 1940s - the legacy of the Depression, and the struggles against fascism and rascism - so The Expendable Man, published in 1963 during Kennedy's presidency and set in…
It is April 1st, 2038. Day 60 of China's blockade of the rebel island of Taiwan.
The US government has agreed to provide Taiwan with a weapons system so advanced that it can disrupt the balance of power in the region. But what pilot would be crazy enough to run…
United States society constantly debates the role of our social safety net (or the lack of one) every political season. Holding It Together documents how women are forced to pick up the slack where we fall short in everything from childcare to elder care to baking brownies for a school bake sale. Poignantly told through the stories of women interviewed for the book, your views on the United States system of care and women's roles within it, will be changed by reading this book.
Other countries have social safety nets. The U.S. has women. Holding It Together chronicles the causes and dire consequences.
America runs on women—women who are tasked with holding society together at the seams and fixing it when things fall apart. In this tour de force, acclaimed Sociologist Jessica Calarco lays bare the devastating consequences of our status quo.
Holding It Together draws on five years of research in which Calarco surveyed over 4000 parents and conducted more than 400 hours of interviews with women who bear the brunt of our broken system. A widowed single mother struggles to patch together…