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by Roberto Martínez Catalán (Author), Paul Sharkey (Translator)
The first English-language book dedicated to the story of the Durruti Column during the Spanish Civil War.
On July 24, 1936, one week after the Spanish working class took up arms against General Franco's fascist coup an armed column, comprised primarily of partisans from the anarcho-syndicalist CNT, left Barcelona. Leading this militia was Buenaventura Durruti, the most famous anarchist in Spain. Durruti and his compatriots had just participated in the street fighting that temporarily defeated Franco's military uprising. Now they were heading to Zaragoza, an important CNT stronghold whose liberation would represent a decisive advance for the war and the revolution. On the way, the Column sought to establish free communes outside the control of the brittle Republic, while confronting the fascist advance.Roberto Martínez Catalán is a geographer and historian from Aragon, Spain, and author of En el comienzo: Un cuento antiteológico. Zaragoza Bound is his first book in English.
Paul Sharkey has made a vast body of anarchist works available in English, including those of Peter Kropotkin, Errico Malatesta, Nestor Makhno, and many more. He lives in Ireland.