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- <text id=91TT1734>
- <title>
- Aug. 05, 1991: An Affair To Remember
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 05, 1991 Was It Worth It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 60
- An Affair To Remember
- </hdr><body>
- <qt>
- <l>WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON?</l>
- <l>By Thomas Geoghegan</l>
- <l>Farrar, Straus & Giroux; 287 pages; $19.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Brooding over a romance gone awry, Thomas Geoghegan wanted
- to get away from it all. Joining the French Foreign Legion was
- out, but a roommate talked him into volunteering as an observer
- at a dissident Mine Workers election. That was in 1972, and the
- beginning of Geoghegan's love affair with a "dumb, stupid,
- mastodon of a thing," a creature that shambles around "with half
- its brain gone." The object of his passion: organized labor.
- </p>
- <p> Raised in the suburbs and a graduate of Harvard Law
- School, Geoghegan, 42, could easily have turned out to be like
- others of his generation, wanting, as he says, to go into real
- estate and cappuccino. Instead he ended up as a labor lawyer in
- Chicago, working for outfits like the Steelworkers, the
- Teamsters and the Autoworkers. Along the way, he also became a
- writer and has produced a fine first book that blends an
- unswervingly honest account of labor's history with his
- adventures as a modern-day Don Quixote of the legal profession
- whose battles take place in union halls and around bargaining
- tables.
- </p>
- <p> The union movement seemed unstoppable in the 1930s, but by
- the time Geoghegan came along, it was developing, as he aptly
- puts it, "a nice, rosy, tubercular glow." He wonders about his
- own political commitment and why he is obsessed with labor and
- its ghosts. It may even be rootless, he thinks, to still be for
- something like "solidarity" or "community" during the Reagan
- era. In one moving passage, he describes the scene at a
- Wisconsin plant closing that marked the end for the Autoworkers
- local. Standing outside the plant, not knowing what to do, the
- members decide to scream. It was, said the papers later, a yell
- that could be heard in the Loop, 60 miles away. To Geoghegan,
- it was a scream Edvard Munch could have painted. One day that
- scream will be commemorated with a plaque, he writes, "and
- people will walk past it and remember. And they will think: This
- was the last scream they screamed before they left organized
- labor." If Geoghegan is right, his book is an eloquent epitaph.
- </p>
- <p>-- By Emily Mitchell
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-