Episodios

  • 027 - Dust To Dust Ashes To Ashes
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    22 m
  • 026 - The Recording Angel Causes All the Trouble
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    37 m
  • 025 - The Telling Of It All Lets In a Flood Of Light Part 2
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    28 m
  • 024 - The Telling Of It All Lets In a Flood Of Light Part 1
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    27 m
  • 023 - For Some Days Must Be Dark and Dreary
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    24 m
  • 022 - Oh What a Fall Was There My Countrymen
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    20 m
  • 021 - Life Is a Disease Of Which Sleep Relieves Us
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    28 m
  • 020 - The Devil Incarnate Would Still Be Partly Human
    Feb 23 2026
    The Recording Angel, penned by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, stands as one of the pioneering American proletarian novels, crafted to inspire social reform and political revolution among the working class. Its exploration of themes such as economic disparity between the producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper echelons, and the erosion of the middle class resonates powerfully even in todays global landscape. Promoted as a romance of the future, this fictional narrative intricately weaves a tale of class struggle between laborers and the powerful trust magnates of the burgeoning industrial economy, centered around a groundbreaking electric machine that was merely a figment of imagination in 1905 but is now a commonplace reality. In addition to authoring at least four books, Brenholtz was a prolific poet and a regular contributor to the International Socialist Review, engaging with notable figures such as poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis
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    38 m