The Recording Angel

by Edwin Arnold BRENHOLTZ (1859 - 1953)

It's An Ill Wind That Blows No One Any Good

The Recording Angel

"The Recording Angel," by Edwin Arnold Brenholtz, is one of the earliest examples of an American proletarian novel, a work intended to promote social reform or political revolution among the working classes. The story's themes of economic inequality between producers and consumers, political collusion within the upper classes, and the loss of the middle class ring particularly true today, especially in a global context. Billed as a "romance of the future," the plot of this fictional account of class struggle between workingmen and trust magnates of the new industrial economy hinges on a unique electric machine, which did not exist in 1905, but is quite common today. Besides writing at least four books, the author was a prolific poet and frequent contributor to the International Socialist Review. He corresponded with a variety of personalities, including the poet Edwin Markham, labor leaders Theodore and Eugene Debs, controversial activist and minister George D. Herron, and writer Samuel Clemens. - Summary by Andru Bemis


Listen next episodes of The Recording Angel:
The Telling Of It All Lets In a Flood Of Light (Part 2) , Dust To Dust! Ashes To Ashes , For, Some Days Must Be Dark and Dreary , Life Is a Disease Of Which Sleep Relieves Us , Oh, What a Fall Was There, My Countrymen , The Devil Incarnate Would Still Be Partly Human , The Recording Angel Causes All the Trouble , The Telling Of It All Lets In a Flood Of Light (Part 1)