


One of America’s most celebrated political prisoners since his appearance in the Academy Award nominated film, The Weather Underground, David Gilbert is also the author of No Surrender, a book of essays on politics and history.
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"This book should stimulate learning from our political prisoners, but more importantly it challenges us to work to free them, and in doing so take the best of our history forward." -Susan Rosenberg, author of An American Radical I urge you to read it.” -Peter Coyote, actor, author of Sleeping Where I Fall If there is any benefit to prison, what some refer to as ‘the involuntary monastery,’ it may well look like this book. His particular bet cost him the last three decades in prison, and whether or not you agree with his youthful decision, you can be the beneficiary of his years of deep thought, reflection, and analysis on the reality we all share. “Like many of his contemporaries, David Gilbert gambled his life on a vision of a more just and generous world. “David’s is a unique and necessary voice forged in the growing American gulag, the underbelly of the 'land of the free,' offering a focused and unassailable critique as well as a vision of a world that could be but is not yet-a place of peace and love, joy and justice.” -Bill Ayers, author of Fugitive Days and Teaching Toward Freedom In telling his story, Gilbert also reveals the history of left struggles in the 1960s and 70s, and imparts important lessons for today's activists." -Jordan Flaherty, author of Floodlines: Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six An honest, vivid portrait of a life spent passionately fighting for justice. "Required reading for anyone interested in the history of radical movements in this country. "Gilbert adds heart and bone to the stuff of history." -Mumia Abu-Jamal A cautionary tale and a how-to as well, Love and Struggle is a book as candid, uncompromising, and humane as its author. It’s a battle that was far from won, but is still not lost: the struggle to build a new world, and the love that drives that effort.


Today a beloved and admired mentor to a new generation of activists, he assesses with rare humor, with an understanding stripped of illusions, and with uncommon candor the errors and advances, terrors and triumphs of the Sixties and beyond. In this extraordinary memoir, written from the maximum-security prison where he has lived for almost thirty years, Gilbert tells the intensely personal story of his own Long March from liberal to radical to revolutionary. He was among the first militants who went underground to build the clandestine resistance to war and racism known as “Weatherman.” And he was among the last to emerge, in captivity, after the disaster of the 1981 Brink's robbery, an attempted expropriation that resulted in four deaths and long prison terms. From the early anti-Vietnam War protests to the founding of SDS, from the Columbia Strike to the tragedy of the Townhouse, Gilbert was on the scene: as organizer, theoretician, and above all, activist. A nice Jewish boy from suburban Boston-hell, an Eagle Scout!-David Gilbert arrived at Columbia University just in time for the explosive Sixties.
