The Iron Heel


Read by Matt Soar

(4.5 stars; 172 reviews)

A dystopian novel about the terrible oppressions of an American oligarchy at the beginning of the Twentieth Century, and the struggles of a socialist revolutionary movement. (Introduction by Matt Soar) (8 hr 17 min)

Chapters

00 - Foreword 8:39 Read by Matt Soar
01 - My Eagle 28:51 Read by Matt Soar
02 - Challenges 27:41 Read by Matt Soar
03 - Jackson's Arm 21:04 Read by Matt Soar
04 - Slaves of the Machine 16:26 Read by Matt Soar
05 - The Philomaths 42:29 Read by Matt Soar
06 - Adumbrations 15:03 Read by Matt Soar
07 - The Bishop's Vision 12:45 Read by Matt Soar
08 - The Machine Breakers 29:13 Read by Matt Soar
09 - The Mathematics of a Dream 32:53 Read by Matt Soar
10 - The Vortex 18:10 Read by Matt Soar
11 - The Great Adventure 15:36 Read by Matt Soar
12 - The Bishop 20:15 Read by Matt Soar
13 - The General Strike 18:23 Read by Matt Soar
14 - The Beginning of the End 16:26 Read by Matt Soar
15 - Last Days 11:02 Read by Matt Soar
16 - The End 19:38 Read by Matt Soar
17 - The Scarlet Livery 17:54 Read by Matt Soar
18 - In the Shadow of Sonoma 16:47 Read by Matt Soar
19 - Transformation 16:55 Read by Matt Soar
20 - A Lost Oligarch 14:42 Read by Matt Soar
21 - The Roaring Abysmal Beast 12:42 Read by Matt Soar
22 - The Chicago Commune 22:59 Read by Matt Soar
23 - The People of the Abyss 24:49 Read by Matt Soar
24 - Nightmare 12:18 Read by Matt Soar
25 - The Terrorists 3:59 Read by Matt Soar

Reviews

Fantastic Reading of a Frighteningly Prescient Novel


(5 stars)

I listened to this audiobook at the same time the Michigan legislature passed its bill on "Emergency Managers" who would render city councils and all other local democracy impotent, be appointed directly by the governor, not subject to oversight, with no cap on compensation, and with the fiat powers of absolute dictator. It made the possibility of a world where the government is in thrall to monopoly trusts whose will is enforced by mercenary armies all that much more imminent and terrifyingly plausible. London makes no secret of his sympathy with the working class, but he roots it in a realistic vision where even a future utopia still clings so to male supremacy such that they date things from 1 "Brotherhood of Man" and where a pompous academic haughtily corrects the 'errors' in a primary source text written by a mere woman. Things may be better in London's future utopia, but they're evidently not quite all they could be. London also has a section where he discusses how certain privileged skilled trades unions would become like medieval guilds where membership passed from father to son. He clearly is in favor of the IWW's One Big Union of the working class, regardless of skilled, semi-skilled, or unskilled status. This insight of his can be generalized to the way in which any "meritocratic" system would quickly degenerate to a strict class hierarchy. Though he doesn't explicitly address this aspect, it's such an obvious consequence of his reasoning that I think we can still give him half a century's precedence over Michael Young. This is a richly rewarding book read at a professional level of quality.

Great book, great narration


(5 stars)

I enjoyed this immensely. It was my first introduction to Jack London's work and I will be reading/listening to more. The narrators rhythm, clarity and cadence suit the book and really help to bring it to life. I highly recommend.

Superb, so compellingly read by Matt Soar


(5 stars)

of this compelling social novel by the legendary and controversial, versatile writer of fiction and non fiction Jack London. Of course with London you will not find the higher diction and exposition of the greatest writers, yet this novel is so important. London was better at short stories, journalism, and excelled at adventure novels. London is an emotional writer with adequate writing talent to express his above average insights and experiences. This book is so prescient, nay more, it is a legitimate argument that inequality, war,economic chaos, class and ethnic divisions, chaos("the pecking order", to vent our pain and anger inflicted upon us by the oligarchy so we displace and project on each other),exploitation and misery are still with us as it was from the inception of civilization and sadly will go on into the future. I can answer only for the US. In the 1970's we were on the path to a social democracy. But that was stopped by the oligarchs and plutocrats here. Ever since the working and thus also the middle class have been pushed back towards the robber baron inequality by this insane neo-liberal, false political economy by conservatives and liberals both. From what I gather the same thing started backwards too in the UK with Thatcher, continued by new labour and now the Tory-libdem coalition is going mad with privatization. This privatization of public services and institutions sucks up more of the taxpayer and makes the poor more miserable, and since privatization is based on profit, public services and goods are worse than in the traditional public sector but costs the state more. And contracting public services to private concerns has created a bureaucracy that makes a socialist state seem streamlined.

Less is More?


(4 stars)

Excellent reading by Matt, faultless. The book itself is slow to start but becomes better by the third chapter. The inginuity and originality of the books conception are somewhat hampered by the complexity of the plot. The conceit that the book is a historical manuscript does little to assuage the readers desire for a more coherent character arc or overall message. The abrupt ending leads the reader unsure wether the author knew where he intended to go, but the reader is no longer that bothered about arriving.

An Epic Reading Of A Book Extremely Relevant To Our Times


(5 stars)

That there ever was a "middle-class" is an anomaly to the oligarchs! When you see the struggle of thousands upon thousands of Americans simply to be paid a wage they could live on. When you see the diabolical lengths these "captains of industry" went to stop the reasonable accommodations of peaceful protesters by use of hired thugs and the powers of government under their control. When you see the many maimed, crippled, and killed. The men, women, and children. You realize these psychopathic "elites" would either create a media fear psy-op and/or release a deadly plague to prevent- in times of financial collapse (soon- money printers go brrrrr!) these "elites" would sooner cull and control "the useless eaters" than face the rightful redistribution of their astonishing wealth and seemingly boundless power! They've only met in many extra-governmental "think tanks" usurping key power players in politics and public opinion makers to move forward their plots and schemes to bring about The New World Order!

A Socialist Tract masquerading as Sci Fi. Writing/Reading a 5!!


(4 stars)

Masterfully read! Matt Soar is amazing!!! I could listen to him all day long! Jack London brings his incredible skill to this book... beautifully written.

Amazing


(5 stars)

I can't remember the last time a book made me think or feel as much at this one. A must read for anyone who want to right the wrongs of the capitalist system.


(5 stars)

These dystopian future novels are hitting home these days. This is by far my favorite.