'Rescues the British industrial working class from what EP Thompson described as “the enormous condescension of posterity”, a cultural condescension that relegates working people to under-footmen and scullery maids.' David Aaronovitch, Financial Times
'We must turn to Edd Mustill, a trade unionist and labour historian, who has no trouble finding sources for how the strike played out around the country… and how trade unionists at local as well as national level managed the tricky business of pressuring the government without harming the people, trying to ensure the flow of essential goods (especially foodstuffs) while shutting down businesses, transport, and trade… An account of the events of May 1926 that make sense in terms that contemporaries would have understood while endowing them with significance that present-day readers can recognise: a world we have lost but that remains meaningful.' Peter Mandler, History Today
'In an engaging and highly readable account, Edd Mustill sets the strike in a longer history.' TLS
'In Britain’s Revolutionary Summer, Edd Mustill rightly debunks the claim that the strike was a peculiarly sedate affair in which nobody was killed.' Colin Kidd, The Observer
'A refreshing, vivid account of nine of the most important days in the history of the British labour movement. Mustill puts the reader right in the centre of the action: with the working-class communities who lived and breathed the strike.' Nadia Whittome MP
'The cosy narrative that genial, volunteering Brits managed to muddle through the biggest act of class struggle the country has ever known is belied by the facts. Mustill’s engrossing history of the strike – "an act of both extreme selflessness and extreme self-interest" – should go some way to correcting people’s understanding of these events.' Mike Phipps, Labour Hub
'An accessible history of the General Strike of 1926, aimed at the general reader but with plenty to interest those already well-informed about the dispute.' Solidarity
'Wealthy, efficient and enjoying broad support, Britain's ruling class in the 1920s was unrivalled for its efficiency and foresight. At the same time, the British working class was the largest, best organised and most conscious of its class solidarity. The General Strike of 1926 was an almost pure test of power and will between these two mighty forces. With narrative flair, cool passion, and a telling eye for detail, Edd Mustill tells the story of this legendary duel, those extraordinary nine days in May when all eyes worldwide turned to the class struggle on Britain's shores.' Marc Mulholland, author of The Murderer of Warren Street
‘Drawing on an expansive range of existing accounts, as well as previously undisclosed archival material, this book magnificently explores the multidimensional dynamics of what was a remarkable historical class confrontation between capital and labour. Reassessing both the sheer scale of government and state counter-mobilisation against the miners and their supporters, and the ultimate capitulation of the TUC General Council in calling off the General Strike, it also counters the narrative of British “moderation” by providing compelling evidence of the inspiring spirit of grassroots militancy, initiative and revolt – albeit unable to prevent the miners being left isolated and defeated.’ Ralph Darlington, author of Labour Revolt in Britain 1910–1914
'A reliable, honest and comprehensive history. The bibliography alone runs to eight pages, including local histories and memoirs as well as archives, newspapers and general histories. A fascinating and outstanding work. Highly recommended.' Mike Jackson, cofounder of Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners