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Twelve Reading Days of Christmas

Twelve Reading Days of Christmas

22 December 2024 /Posted byMark Perryman
Post Views: 1,071

Mark Perryman provides his annual seasonal reading guide

OK twelve books in twelve days, in between welcoming Santa down the chimney, preparing the nut roast for Christmas dinner, sabotaging the Boxing Day hunt and then after the briefest of respites, Hogmanay! 

So more of a guide for what to look forward to by way of post-seasonal intellectual recovery, ready for whatever 2025 has in store for us. 

1. Going into Labour

‘ A Marxist analysis of childbirth and birth care’: just the ticket for a day marking the most famous incident of giving birth in human history. A manger, three kings, assorted shepherds with sheep, all lit by a star, and God knows (well if anyone knows he/she should) what up above, but not a gynaecologist in sight. Anna Fielder provides a unique insight into the everyday experience of what for many others, not just Mary and Joseph, will be the most momentous event of their lives. Yet framed by capitalism, colonialism, and misogyny, for many people it’s not the pleasure it should be. 

From Pluto books here  

2. Verso Radical Diary and Planner 2025

Christmas Day out of the way, leftovers to mop up, never-ending pile of mince pies to tuck into, Christmas wrapping paper sorted for recycling. Only one task remaining for Boxing Day, for those with a life not entirely taken over by their smartphone to organise every sentient minute of the day, and that is order a 2025 diary. And only one choice for any self-styled organic intellectual – Verso’s. 

Combining the stylishness Verso is rightly renowned for with a daily and monthly digest of history and insights to provide a 365-day guide to the radical and revolutionary. One date is missing mind you, 13 October 2025, the centenary of Margaret Thatcher’s birth. All together now, ‘Maggie, Maggie, Maggie. Out! Out! Out!’

From Verso books here    

3. John Horner and the Communist Party: Uncomfortable Encounters with Truth 

The 2024 General Election was marked by Jeremy Corbyn elected as an independent left MP, despite everything the Labour Party threw at Islington North to stop him. And they did the same in Brighton Pavilion, throwing everything at it to take the seat back from the Green Party, and failing there too.  Add in the four Muslim independent MPs plus three more Green MPs, and this is quite a bloc. 

Rosalind Eyben’s superb book tells the story of an earlier era of left-of-Labour hope. The Communist Party of the 1930s, the Popular Front, fighting an anti-fascist war at home, and solidarity with the Red Army on the Eastern Front away. Willie Gallagher and Phil Piratin elected Communist Party MPs as part of Labour’s 1945 landslide. Hopes dashed not much more than a decade later by Stalin’s 1956 invasion of Hungary. All told via the life of John Horner, Communist, creator of the Fire Brigades Union when it was needed more than ever before – the Blitz – and Rosemary’s father. The maxim ‘the personal is political’ could have been written for this most special book.

From Routledge here                 

4. You Can’t Please All: Memoirs 1980-2024 

2024 follows 1945, 1964 and 1997 as a year of a Labour landslide. Yet a decent chunk of the

Left, while happy to bid a none too fond farewell to 14 years of Tory (with a little help from 

Nick Clegg) ‘progress’, isn’t exactly dancing in the streets – marching more like. 

Tariq Ali has been a towering figure for this outside left for the best part of 60 years. His 

memoir of the 1960s Street Fighting Years has recently been reissued to accompany Tariq’s

new post 1968 memoir, You Can’t Please All. A spellbinding testimony of the revolutionary 

expectations that framed a generation via Vietnam, Black Power, and the Prague Spring. 

How they helped some stay the course through what the ensuing almost half century threw 

at his Generation Left. A vital read for all who seek to stay the course, but especially today’s 

Generation Left formed by the 2010 University Tuition Fees protest movement, 2015-19 

Corbynism and 2023-Gaza, as they pass through their thirtysomethings.       

From Verso books here   

5. Big Flame: Building Movements, New Politics

There is widespread expectation that the New Year will be marked by Jeremy Corbyn

launching a new party of the Left.  Wags may suggest we’ve had one of those before, Tariq                                   

Ali’s own International Marxist Group, just one of the 57 varieties of, before in time-

honoured fashion splitting to create even more varieties. 

Jeremy will be hoping against hope to avoid the pitfalls of previous efforts, but one deserves 

some closer study than an otherwise record of unmitigated failure. Max Farrar and Kevin 

McDonnell retell the story of ‘Big Flame’ a very creative effort to combine the personal,

the local and the political in a formation that was part party and part movement. If Jeremy’s 

outfit can achieve that combination it might be onto something.

From Merlin Press here  

6.  The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament  

A lifetime ago I was a student at Hull University. This was 1978-81 at the height of 

opposition to the renewal of Britain’s nuclear deterrent (sic) with Trident submarines and 

the basing of US Cruise missiles at Greenham and Molesworth. Martin Shaw was a lecturer 

at Hull and inspired so many of us with his vision of, and arguments for, a nuclear weapon-

free Europe. Despite CND’s decline he remains one of the best thinkers for what a broad, 

imaginative and effective movement looks like. Making his history an essential read at 

this time of precious little peace and not much goodwill. 

From Agenda Publishing here 

7. Anti-Racism in Britain: Traditions, Histories and Trajectories, 1980 – present

Edited by Saffron East, Grace Redhead and Theo Williams, their book is a most timely 

historical survey of ant-racism in Britain. Combining a richly imaginative thematic approach 

with the historic Anti-Racism in Britain ranges over the colonial legacy of Empire via the 

politics of emergent diasporas to the contestation around ‘multiculturalism’. An essential 

read with the current across-the-political-spectrum stirring of anti-immigration sentiment. 

Just one request to the publisher though, this title deserves a cheaper paperback edition,

pronto. 

From Manchester University Press here  

8. Multitudes 

Vietnam, Nuclear Disarmament, Iraq, anti-racism, and currently Gaza – all, and more, have 

each sparked huge protest movements. Dan Hancox’s hugely original Multitudes places the 

simple and timeless exercise of marching for or against come what may in a quite 

different context, the making of a crowd. The convivial and the political are too often 

alien to one another but for good, or bad, when they coalesce the crowd becomes a 

movement. A book that lands somewhere infinitely richer than Planet Placard. Hurrah!

From Verso books here 

9. Belfast Punk and The Troubles: An Oral History

To brighten the seasonal political, mood, the sight of the lead singer of 1970s Northern Irish Punk Band the Undertones, best known hit a heartfelt tribute to adolescent boys’ masturbation Teenage Kicks, emerging as the effective leader of the movement against inland and coastal waters pollution. Who would have thought when we were pogoing away to Feargal Sharkey belting out ‘Get teenage kicks right through the night, all right’ he’d end up being the eloquent spokesperson for the unanswerable case to renationalise the water boards. Poster boy of the counterhegemony? Feargal fits the bill, perfectly. And to understand how, and why, Fearghus Roulston unravels the culture of late 1970s, in the words of another band of the period and place, Stiff Little Fingers, Alternative UIster. Sus-Sus-Suspect Device. 

From Manchester University Press here 

 10. I Saw Democracy Murdered: The Memoir of Sam Russell, Journalist

The British Battalion of the International Brigades, it is almost unimaginable the idea that 

civilians with no military training would travel across Europe, defying border controls and 

arrest to take up arms. George Orwell the most famous who did so, but the biggest single 

contingent? Welsh miners. Sam Russell’s memoir tells his own fascinating story of the 

impact being an International Brigader had on his politics, his journalism for the Daily 

Worker and Morning Star, the shaping of his dissident anti-Stalinist communism. An 

inspirational read to start 2025.

From Routledge here               

11. The Battle for Britain: Crises, Conflicts and the Conjuncture

In the late 1970s the analysis of an academic book Policing the Crisis: Mugging, the State 

and Law and Order by Stuart Hall with Brian Roberts and John Clarke gestated via the 

magazine Marxism Today into the hugely influential ‘Thatcherism’ debate.  John Clarke’s 

new book consists of a wonderful surprise package of ideas, applying the conceptual 

analysis John first pioneered with the much-missed Stuart Hall to the present, or 

as John and Stuart would teach us, the ‘conjuncture’. An incredible intellectual treat to start 

the year.  

From Bristol University Press here                

12. If… Stands Up  

My Five Star pick for a read to start 2025 is Steve Bell’s If… Stands Up. Part collection of  

Steve’s final (let’s hope not) five years of his If… cartoon strip and part diarisation of his 

appalling treatment by the Guardian for whom he’d provided both If.. and comment page 

cartoons for 42 years. 

The cartoon he was got rid of for was about Gaza, the Guardian editor deemed it anti-

semitic, a charge Steve refutes in the most effective way imaginable: “As to the truth of 

whether my fatal cartoon was actually antisemitic or not. When the Israeli cartoonists’ 

association asked that very question, and took a vote on it, that vote was unanimous: it was 

not. And I will take that opinion over that of a gaggle of Guardian editors any day of the 

week.” 

Those editors have replaced Steve’s artistic sharpness on the comment pages with the 

effortlessly bland while If… hasn’t been replaced at all, these hapless editors discovering, 

too late, it’s irreplaceable. Never mind, on p181 I was delighted to read “My friends at 

Philosophy Football have helped keep me sane, as well as active, by suggesting more and more daft merchandising ideas”. To which I can only add, happy to oblige Steve!

From Verso books here 

Philosophy Football’s daft Steve Bell merchandising ideas from here      

Note No links in this review are to Amazon. Almost all offer special discounts on the books 

featured while avoiding giving money to tax-dodging billionaires who seek to prevent their 

employees joining a trade union.  

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About Author

Mark Perryman

Mark Perryman is co-founder of the self-styled ‘sporting outfitters of intellectual distinction’ aka Philosophy Football. His latest book is 'The Starmer Symptom', available from Pluto.

Other posts by Mark Perryman

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