An Infinity of Days in the Psychotic Atomik Empire


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About The Book

Norton flexes his literary muscles and takes on an impressive breadth of topics in these gritty passionate tales. He turns genres inside out has a hell of an ear for dialogue and knows how to tell a good story. Dean Monti author of The Sweep of the Second Hand Greg Nortons stories resonate with the reader like the rumble of a glass-pack muffler off the hard Chicago streets many of his characters ply. Nortons alter ego Peter MacNaughton is one part Philip Marlowe and one part Joe Hill and real as the Hawk in January no matter what situation he finds himself in. Guns drugs the down and out union activists and everyday people Norton brings them all to life with amazing clarity. Great reading! Jim Chandler Fast-paced and sometimes furious these linked Chicago stories involve burnt-out radicals women in flight workers that get away with things while searching for self-respect. There a few old-style labor battles too and for once the union rep actually wins an argument with the company guy. Its worth a read in times when even partial victories are hard to come by. John Crawford Editor West End Press Nortons work is strikingly original and highly inventive but perhaps more importantly possesses a strong sense of political relevance. Fred Schepartz Editor Mobius: A Journal of Social Change Greg Nortons fiction gives an accurate and vivid portrait of some of the most important currents of rebellion in working-class life. Very few writers today have a clue about this paramount question in American life. His novel There Aint No Justice Just Us and some of the stories in this collection notably Factory open a vista of the possibilities of revolt for the working-class majority against the capitalist parasites. They are inspiring. Tim Hall Editor Struggle Magazine
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