Granny Made Me An Anarchist

General Franco, The Angry Brigade, and Me

Stuart Christie 2004 400p 5.5 x 8

In 1964, a fresh-faced, eighteen-year-old Glaswegian named Stuart Christie became the most famous anarchist in Britain. He was arrested delivering dynamite to Madrid to be used in the assassination of Spanish dictator General Franco. After serving three of his twenty-year sentence, he was released, due to international pressure from supporters like Bertrand Russell and Jean Paul Sartre. Eight years later, he was arrested again in England on suspicion of membership in the Angry Brigade—an armed group hell-bent on overthrowing the government—but was this time acquitted. Christie’s warm and witty memoir, from the tough streets of post-World War II Glasgow to the heady ideals of the Generation of ’68, reads like a cloak-and-dagger political thriller. Granny Made Me an Anarchist chronicles clandestine political maneuverings, life behind bars, and flirtations with radical youth who were convinced the government could be toppled and their country made anew.

$11-15

Other works involving stuart christie, anarchism, armed struggle, autobiography, the angry brigade, dynamite, spanish civil war, prison, counterculture, assassination, prisoner writings, propaganda by the deed, britain, spain, 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, 1900s