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LISTING OF PARTY PUBLICATIONS

The number of pamphlets, leaflets, and books of the various Communist Parties for the period 1919-1930 runs into the multiple hundreds of titles. What follows is a very early and very partial list -- more information will be added over time. Serious collectors interested in contributing information are encouraged to get in touch: MutantPop@aol.com.

 

(old) COMMUNIST PARTY OF AMERICA (1919-1921)

Official Organs

The organ of the Communist Party of America was a newspaper published in Chicago called The Communist. There were a number of publications by this name -- the CPA's Communist was directly preceded by a paper of the same name edited by Dennis Batt. When the CPA took over operation of the publication in 1919, numbering was started over from vol. 1, no. 1. The paper shut down briefly due to the Palmer Raids of Jan. 1920, before being resumed as an underground publication around Feb. 15, with an initial print run of about 7,000.

A theoretical monthly called The International was scheduled to be launched in January of 1920, but the first issue was seized at the press in the Palmer Raids. No copies were distributed and as of this writing no copies are known to have survived.

The theoretical magazine of the Workers (Communist) Party was The Liberator, a publication started by Max and Crystal Eastman in 1918 that was turned over to the CP circa 1921. In 1924 that magazine was merged with Soviet Russia Pictorial and The Labor Herald to establish The Workers Monthly. In 1927 there was another change of format and Workers Monthly was transformed into a theoretical magazine called The Communist; an artistic-oriented magazine called The New Masses was started at the same time.

The old CPA did not publish any books in 1919, but it did distribute three titles by Louis Fraina which were published by others as though they were CPA publications. It did print pamphlets and leaflets of its own, however.

 

Books

Fraina, Louis C.: Revolutionary Socialism. [1918] -- An original theoretical work by Fraina written in 1918.

Fraina, Louis C.: The Social Revolution in Germany. [1919] -- A collection of articles on the subject published in The Revolutionary Age.

N. Lenin and Leon Trotzky: The Proleterian Revolution in Russia. Louis C. Fraina, ed. [1918] -- (A collection of writings by Lenin and Trotsky with extensive commentary by Fraina.)

 

Pamphlets

1. Manifesto, Program, and Constitution of the Communist Party and Report to the International. [1919] -- 25,000 printed.

2. Karl Radek: The Development of Socialism from Science to Action. [December 1919] -- 10,000 printed.

3. The Communist Party and the IWW -- A Debate. [December 1919]

 

Leaflets

1. "On Martial Law at Gary Indiana." [1919] -- 100,000 printed

2. "On the Blockade of Soviet Russia." [1919] -- 250,000 printed

3. "Your Shop." [November 1919] -- 250,000 printed

4. "The State -- Strike-Breaker." [Nov. 1919]

5. "You Must Unite, Workingmen." [Dec. 1919]

 

Please note that publications of the Contemporary Publishing Association = C.P.A. = Communist Party of America. During 1920-21 the party was illegal in the United States, thus the underground subterfuge...

 

Pamphlets

Bucharin, N. [Bukharin, N.]: The Communist Program: An Analysis of the Principles of the Russian Communist Party. -- 6,000 printed

Central Executive Committee of the CPA: Stenographic Report of the "Trial" of L.C. Fraina. -- 3,000 printed.

Kollontay, Alexandra: Communism and the Family. [1920] -- 12,000 printed

Lenin, N.: The Dictatorship of the Proletariat and Elections to the Constituent Assembly. [1920] -- 15,000 printed

Lenin, N.: The Infantile Sickness of "Leftism" in Communism. [1920] -- 8,000 printed

Lenin, Nicolai: Kautsky the Renegade and the Proletarian Revolution. [1920] -- 8,000 printed.

Lenin, N.: Problems of the Third International (Ramsay Macdonald on the Third International). [1920] -- 10,000 printed

Lenin, N.: Should Communists Participate in Reactionary Trade Unions? [1920] -- 10,000 printed

Zinovieff, G. [Zinoviev].: Communism and the Proletarian Revolution in Russia. [1920] -- 10,000 printed

The Communist Internationale to the IWW: An Appeal of the Executive Committee of the Third Internationale at Moscow. [January 1920] -- 10,000 printed.This work was signed by Zinoviev but content indicates it was actually written by an American in Moscow.

 

Leaflets

6. Rules for Underground Party Work. [1920] -- 4 page leaflet printed for internal use.

"Hail To the Soviets!" [May Day Proclamation 1920]

"B.R.T. Strikers!" [September 1920] -- 16,000 printed, on Brooklyn streetcar strike

"Proletarian Revolution or Wage Slavery." [1920] -- 240,000 printed. Printed on cheap newsprint, single sheet of paper folded but not cut; recipient needed to cut and collate to make 8 pp. pamphlet, published in name of CEC of CPA.

"Boycot the 1920 Elections." [circa Fall 1920] -- 225,000 printed.

[Leaflet to Coal Strikers.] [1920] -- 35,000 printed.

[Leaflet to Philadelphia Shipyard Workers] [1920] -- 10,000 printed.

[Leaflet to Lawrence, MA Textile Workers] [1920] -- 5,000 printed.

 

Pamphlets

Kameneff, L.: The Dictatorship of the Proletariat. [1921]  -- 10,000 printed

Ulianov, V.I. (Lenin, N.): The State and Revolution: Marxist Teaching on the State and the Task of the Proletariat in the Revolution. [1921] -- 10,000 printed

Theses and Resolutions Adopted at the Third World Congress of the Communist International (June 22nd - July 12th, 1921). [1921] -- 10,000 printed

 

Leaflets

"Unemployment" [circa Feb. 1921] -- 455,000 printed

"Stand By Soviet Russia" -- 483,000 printed

"Then and Now." -- 541,000 printed

"May Day." -- 577,000 printed. CPA's 1921 May Day proclamation.

[American Bureau on RILU] -- 40,000 printed

 

[fn. Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 50, l. 79.]

 


COMMUNIST LABOR PARTY OF AMERICA (1919-1920)

The Communist Labor Party was initially based in Cleveland, OH, with its office at 3207 Clark Avenue. At the Oct. 25-27, 1919, meeting of the National Executive Committee in New York City, the nexus of the organization was moved to New York. From November of 1919 the National Office of the CLP was located at 208 E 12th Street, New York, NY.

 

Official Organs

The Communist Labor Party published short runs of at least five periodicals: Communist Labor Party News (no fewer than 3 monthly issues, Sept.-Nov. 1919) was proclaimed the "Official Organization Organ of the Communist Labor Party." It was a four page newpaper sold in bundles for $1.00 per 100.

Communist Labor was launched on Dec. 6, 1919, projected as a bi-weekly. It was touted as the "Fighting Organ of the Party" and was conceived as a propaganda paper for both party members and their associates, who might be interested in the party. Max Bedacht was the first editor of the publication. By May 15, 1920 had only issued its 6th issue.

Voice of Labor was the CLP's trade union paper, edited by John Reed and Benjamin Gitlow. It was a bi-weekly (published in opposite weeks than Communist Labor) and advanced the slogan of "One Big Union" for American Workers. In Nov. 1919 a circulation of 15,000 was claimed. The paper sold for 5 cents per copy, annual subscriptions fo $1.50, and bundles of 100 for $3.

All Together, which may or may not have actually been launched, was projected as "the Monthly Propaganda paper of the party." The paper was to be targeted to a mass audience, compiling "the best articles and illustrations appearing inn Communist Labor and the Voice of Labor for the Month. Price was to be 50 cents per 100 or $5 per 1000.

The Class Struggle was to be the theoretical magazine of the party. Originally published by Louis Fraina and Ludwig Lore, Fraina left the staff to join the Communist Party of America, leaving Lore at the helm. Only 1 issue was published under CLP auspices (Nov. 1919) before publication was terminated due to lack of funds.

 

Pamphlets

The CLP took over the publication backstock of the Socialist Publication Society of Brooklyn, NY, and its first list of publication for sale were strictly SPS publications, as follows:

1. Bukharin [Bucharin], N.: Program of the Communist Labor Party of Russia. -- 25 cents.

2. Education and Art in Soviet Russia. -- 15 cents; wholesale 10¢ or $80/1000.

3. Lenin, N.: Letter to American Workingmen. -- 5 cents; wholesale 2¢ or $15/1000.

4. Lenin, N.: New Letter to Workers of Europe and Ameica. -- 5 cents; wholesale 2¢ or $15/1000.

5. Luxemburg, Rosa: Crisis in German Social Democracy (Junius). -- 25 cents; wholesale 17 cents.

6. Price, M. Philips: Old Order in Europe, New Order in Russia. -- 10 cents; wholesale 6¢ or $50/1000.

7. Price, M. Philips: Terror, Soviet Russia, and Intervention. -- 10 cents; wholesale 6¢ or $50/1000.

8. Radek, Karl: Development of Socialism into Action. -- 10 cents.

9. Radek, Karl and Ransome, Arthur: Radek and Ransome on Russia. -- 5 cents; wholesale 3¢ or $25/1000.

 

Leaflets

1. "Hands Off Soviet Russia." [Nov. 1919] -- by A. Raphailoff (project assigned at Oct. 25-27 NEC Meeting).

2. "You Coal Miners." [Nov. 1919] -- by Jack Carney (project assigned at Oct. 25-27 NEC Meeting).

"The Red Raids" [Jan. 1920].

"Capitalism -- Your Days Are Numbered!" [circa Jan. 1920]

"Railroad Workers -- Fight On!"

"Down Tools On May First! Workers Awaken! Workers Unite!" [April 1920]

(On the Polish Situation) [Aug. 1920] -- 200,000 printed

.

 

 


UNITED COMMUNIST PARTY OF AMERICA (1920-21)

The United Communist Party was formed at a convention held in Bridgman, Michigan, from May 26-31, 1920. It merged the Communist Labor Party of America with a minority faction of the Communist Party of America.

 

Official Organs

The Official Organ of the United Communist Party was a newspaper called The Communist.

 

Leaflets

1. "Why Are You Out of a Job?"

2. "Don't Be So Sure of Your Job!"

3. "Stand By Soviet Russia: Proclamation of the United Communist Party of America." -- copy Comintern Archive f. 515, op. 1, d. 43, l. 108.

4. "Workers! What is Coming?: Proclamation of the United Communist Party of America."

5. "Boycott the Election!: Proclamation of the United Communist Party of America."

6. "Dynamite and Bombs."

7. "Carmen -- Strike to Win!"

 

Pamphlets

Robert Minor: Steadman's Red Raid. [May 1921] -- Toiler Publishing Association, pam

 

 

The UCP also distributed two pamphlets produced by the American Bureau of the RILU:

 

 

 


 

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(unified) COMMUNIST PARTY OF AMERICA (1921-23)

The (unified) Communist Party of America was established by a unity convention held at Woodstock, New York, in May of 1921. The party's essential functions were merged into the Workers Party of America at the end of January 1923 and the organization was formally disbanded by a convention held in New York City on April 7, 1923.

 

Pamphlets

1. The Labor Day Manifesto. [Sept. 1922]

 

Leaflets

"The Tulsa Massacre!" -- 2 pp., June 1921.

"Russia's Appeal to the Workers of the World." -- 2 pp.

"Make it a Party of Action!" -- 4 pp. on the Legal Party and the factional opposition thereto, circa Nov. 1921

"The Capitalists Challenge You, Workingmen! Proclamation of the Communist Party of America." -- [on Gary, IN. c. 1922] 2 pp. copy: f. 515, op. 1, d. 101, l. 14.

"To the Striking Longshoremen: Proclamation Issued by the Communist Party of America, Local Greater New York." - - 1 pg. copy: f. 515, op. 1, d. 101, l. 13.

 

 

 


 

(unified) COMMUNIST PARTY OF AMERICA (est. May 1921)

WORKERS PARTY OF AMERICA (est. Dec. 1921)

 

Official Organs and Magazines

The main English language legal weekly newspaper of the American Communist movement was The Toiler (formerly The Ohio Socialist), which came to the party from the old United Communist Party. The Toiler merged with The Workers Council to form a new publication called The Worker in January 1922. At the time of the Dec. 1922 Second Convention of the WPA, the claimed circulation of The Worker was 15,500.At the end of 1924, this publication moved to a daily production schedule and assumed the name The Daily Worker.

The theoretical magazine of the Workers (Communist) Party was The Liberator, a publication started by Max Eastman and his sister Crystal Eastman in 1918 when The Masses was banned by postal authorities. Informally tied to the left wing of movement from the time of its creation, the publication was turned over to the CP in November 1922 rather than suspend publication for economic reasons. At the time of the Dec. 1922 Second Convention of the WPA, the claimed circulation of this publication was 18,000. In 1924 that magazine was merged with the Friends of Soviet Russia's Soviet Russia Pictorial and the Trade Union Educational League's The Labor Herald to establish The Workers Monthly. In 1927 there was another change of format and Workers Monthly was transformed into a theoretical magazine called The Communist; an artistic-oriented magazine called The New Masses was started at the same time.

The Communist changed its title to Political Affairs in 1945 and continues publication by that name to this day.

[fn. Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 148, ll. 113, 118.; d. 149, l. 27.]

During 1924, the party issued a newspaper called Farmer Labor Voice [Chicago], edited by Joseph Manley.

The Workers Party published a pamphlet-sized magazine calle The American Worker Correspondent in 1926, a publication dedicated to training workekr-correspondents.

Books and Pamphlets.

Foster, William Z.: The Bankruptcy of the American Labor Movement. [written Oct. 1922] -- Trade Union Educational League (Labor Heral d Library no. 4)

Lenin, N.: Should Communists Participate in Reactionary Trade Unions? [1922?] -- Literature Dept., Workers Party of America, pam.

[Pepper, John:] For a Labor Party: Recent Revolutionary Changes in American Politics: A Statement by the Workers Party -- Workers Party of America, pbb; 10,000 copies.

Trotsky, Leon: Dictatorship vs. Democracy. [1922] -- cloth, 1,000 copies printed ($1.00 retail); paper 4,000 copies (50 cents retail). ("Workers Party Library No. 1").

WPA: Party Program and Constitution. [1922] -- Workers Party of America, pam; 10,000 copies printed.

 

Communism and the Family. -- 5,000 copies.

Constitution of Soviet Russia. -- 5,000 copies.

Decisions of the Red Trade Union International. -- Voice of Labor, tpb; 2,000 copies.

Should Communists Participate in Trade Unions? -- 5,000 copies.

 

Leaflets.

The Jobless Millions. -- 200,000 copies.

Hands Off Uncle Sam. -- 145,000 copies.

Armed Struggle at Herrin. -- 225,000 copies.

Workers Unite Against the Bosses. -- 200,000 copies.

Congressional Election. -- 50,000 copies.

Alabama Election. -- 5,000 copies.

A Political Party for Labor. -- 25,000 copies.

 

Books and Pamphlets.

Bukharin ["Bucharin"], Nikolai:The ABC of Communism. [1923] -- Lyceum-Literature Department, Workers Party of America, tpb

Cannon, James P.: The Fifth Year of the Russian Revolution. [1923] -- Workers Party of America, pam

Dunne, William F.: William F. Dunne's Speech at the AF of L Convention: Portland, 1923. [1923] -- Trade Union Educational League, pam (Labor Herald Library no. 9)

ECCI: Strategy of the Communists: A Letter from the Communist International to the Mexican Communist Party. --- pamphlet (regarded as important to the US party for its discussion of United Front, divisions of the capitalist class, and discussion of Pan-American imperialism; not considered a piece for outside the party)

Lovestone, Jay: Blood and Steel: An Exposure of the 12 Hour Day in the Steel Industry. [1923] -- Workers Party of America, pam (on the 8 hour day drive in the steel industry)

Lovestone, Jay: The Government -- Strikebreaker: A Study of the Role of the Government in the Recent Industrial Crisis. [1923] -- Workers Party of America, hc ("Workers Party Library No. 2").

Lovestone, Jay: What's What About Coolidge. [1923] -- Workers Party of America, pam (examination of Coolidge's financial relations and political history)

Pepper, John: For a Labor Party: Recent Revolutionary Changes in American Politics: A Statement by the Workers Party. [Enlarged 2nd Editon] [1923] -- Workers Party of America, pam

Pepper, John: For a Labor Party: Recent Revolutionary Changes in American Politics: A Statement by the Workers Party. [Enlarged 3rd Edition] [1923]. -- Workers Party of America, pam (enlarged to include July 3-5 FFLP Convention)

Pepper, John: "Underground Radicalism": An Open Letter to Eugene V. Debs and to All Honest Workers Within the Socialist Party. [1923] -- Workers Party of America, pam

Pepper, John: "Underground Radicalism": An Open Letter to Eugene V. Debs and to All Honest Workers Within the Socialist Party. [Second Edition.] [1923] -- Workers Party of America, pam

Ware, Clarissa S.: The American Foreign-Born Workers. [early 1923, probably January] -- Workers Party of America, pam

 

Leaflets

Throughout the 1920s there was a rough division of the Communist Party's Publications between the Daily Worker Publishing Co./Workers Library Publishers for pamphlets (the name change coming in early 1927) and, from its origin in 1925, International Publishers for books. In 1930 International also launched a series of pamphlets.

 

Pamphlets

Bittelman, Alexander: Parties and Issues in the Election Campaign. -- Literature Dept., WPA, pam. -- 12,000 printed. Circa September 1924.

Browder, Earl: Unemployment: Why it Occurs and How to Fight It. -- Literatur

Lovestone, Jay: The LaFollette Illusion: As Revealed in an Analysis of the Political Role of Senator Robert M. LaFollette. -- Literature Dept., WPA, pam. -- 8,000 printed. Circa September 1924.

Ruthenberg, C.E.: The Farmer-Labor United Front. - Literature Dept., WPA, pam. --

Ruthenberg, C.E.: Why Every Worker Should be a Communist and Join the Workers Party. -- Early 1924. First edition was 100,000 copies. 8 pp.

The Second Year of the Workers Party of America: Report of the Central Executive Committee to the Third National Convention, Held in Chicago, Illinois, Dec. 30, 31, 1923, and Jan. 1, 2, 1924: Theses, Program, Resolutions. -- Literature Dept., WPA, tpb. -- 2,000 printed. January 1924. In June, the Party's NYC Bookstore manager (who had 1/4 of the press run to sell) complained: "Eventually this pamphlet will have to be junked unless you will be able to dispose of it through the National Office. It will neve be able to sell here, even at 1¢ per copy." [Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 349, l. 91.]

Ulianov, V.I. (Lenin, Nicolai) : The State and Revolution: New Edition. [April 1924] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., tpb

Unemployed. -- 20,000 printed.

 

Leaflets

For a United Front of Labor! -- 4 page leaflet.

Fight Registration of Foreign Born Workers! Laws Before Congress Propose to Enslave Foreign Born Workers to aid Employers in Fighting Unions and Reducing Wages. -- 2 page leaflet. Early 1924. Copy in Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 290, l. 12.

Stand Fast for the Farmer-Labor Party: Statement by the Central Executive Committee, Workers Party of America. -- 4 page leaflet, circa March 1924. Copy in Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 290, l. 3.

The Kept Government of the United States. -- 2 pg. leaflet, WPA address is 1009 N State Street (i.e. early 1924). Copy in Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 290, l. 4.

Build the United Front for Labor's International Holiday: Manifesto of the Workers Party of America. -- 1 page May Day flier. Copy in Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 290, l. 10. Circa April 1924.

The United States Today. -- Program of the WPA. Early 1924.

Let the Miners Run the Mines. -- Leaflet. Early 1924.

To All Socialist Voters and Class Conscious Workers. -- 2 page campaign leaflet. 100,000 printed. Lists Foster and Gitlow as candidates. Copy in Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 290, l. 13. Circa September 1924.

Forward to the Workers and Farmers Government! Platform of the Workers Party of America. - 2 page campaign leaflet. 900,000 printed. Features Robert Minor political cartoon. Copy in Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 290, l. 14. Circa September 1924.

The Conference for Progressive Political Action Serving the Interests of the Bosses: To the Trade Unionists of America! To the Workers and Poor Farmers! -- 2 page leaflet. Copy in Comintern Archive, f. 515, op. 1, d. 290, l. 11. Circa Nov. 1924.

Workers Rule or Capitalist Dictatorship? -- 450,000 printed.

Work or Wages for the Unemployed? -- 250,000 printed.

 

Newspapers and Magazines.

Here is a list of Communist newspapers and magazines, as of 1925:

Daily Worker. English daily; J. Louis Engdahl and William F. Dunne, eds. -- circ. 25,000

Dabininkiu Balsas. Lithuanian Womens' monthly. Helen Yeskevich, ed. -- circ. 4,000

Delnik. Bohemian.

Empros. Greek weekly. -- circ. 5,000

Desteptarea. Romanian weekly. John C. Serb, ed. -- circ.1,850

Enteenpain. Finnish daily. Elis Sulkanen, ed. -- circ. 9,800

Freiheit [Freedom]. Yiddish daily. -- circ. 50,000

Labor Unity. West Coast English weekly. -- circ. 3,500

Laisve. Lithuanian daily. -- circ. 15,000

Il Lavoratore. Italian daily. -- circ. 12,500

New Yorker Volkkszeitung [New York People's News]. German daily. Ludwig Lore, ed. -- circ. 22,000

Novyi Mir [The New World]. Russian daily. Y.A. Brailovsky, ed. -- circ. 14,000

Ny Tid [The New Age]. Swedish weekly. Daniel Birgers, ed. -- circ. 5,000

Obrana. Czech weekly. Vaclav Abraham, ed. -- circ. 3,600

Proletar. Armenian weekly. -- circ. 1,100

Radnik. Croatian tri-weekly. L. Fisher, K. Mikhalachky, eds. -- circ. 8,000

Sasnanio. Bulgarian fortnightly.

Spravedlnost. Czech daily.

Toveri. West Coast Finnish daily. -- circ. 3,892

Trybuna Rabotnicza [Workers' Tirbune]. Polish weekly.

Työmies. Finnish daily. -- circ. 13,800

Uj Elore. Hungarian daily. Louis Basky, ed. -- circ. 15,000

Ukrainian Daily News. Ukrainian daily. -- circ. 15,000

Uus Ilm. Estonian weekly. Alexander Kovel, ed. -- circ. 550

Vilnis. Lithuanian semi-weekly. V.J. Andriulis, J.Gasiunas, eds.. -- circ. 11,500

Vorwaerts. German weekly. Ludwig Lore, ed. -- circ. 12,000

The Young Comrade. English children's monthly. Max Shachtman, ed. -- circ. 8,000

The Young Worker. English youth weekly. Max Shachtman, ed. -- circ. 7,000

[fn. Solon DeLeon (ed.), American Labor Press Directory. (NY: Rand School of Social Science, 1925), pp. 20-22]

 

Books and Pamphlets.

Bedacht, Max: The White Terrorists Ask for Mercy: A Comparison of the Persecution of Revolutionists by the White Terror and the Treatment of Counter-Revolutionists in Soviet Russia. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Bell, Tom: The Movement for World Trade Union Unity. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Bukharin, Nikolai: Historical Materialism: A System of Sociology. [1925] -- International Publishers hc

Dunne, William F.: Worker Correspondents: What, Where, When, Why, How? [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 4)

Emmett, W.H.: Marxian Economic Handbook and Glossary. [1925] -- International Publishers hc

Engels, Frederick: Principles of Communism (Engels' Original Draft of the Communist Manifesto). Max Bedacht, trans. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 3)

Foster, W.Z.; Cannon, J.P.; and Browder E.R.: Trade Unions in America. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 1)

Gold, Michael: The Damned Agitator + Free! + The Coal Breaker. [fiction] [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 7)

Gomez, Manuel (ed.): Poems for Workers: An Anthology. [fiction] [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 5)

Kautsky, Karl: Foundations of Christianity. [1925] -- International Publishers hc

Fischer, Louis: Oil Imperialism -- The International Stuggle for Petroleum. [1925?] -- International Publishers hc

Marx, Karl: Selected Essays. [1925?] -- International Publishers hc

Neuman, Heinz: Marx and Engels on Revolution in America. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 6)

Lovestone, Jay (intro.): The Party Organization. [c.1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Pease, Edward R.: The History of the Fabian Society. [1925] -- International Publishers, hc

Ruthenberg, C.E.: From the Third Through the Fourth Convention of the Workers (Communist) Party of America. [Oct. 1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Saklatvala, Shapurji: British Imperialism in India: Speech Delivered in the House of Commons, July 9, 1925. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Saposs, David J.: Left Wing Unionism. [1925?] -- International Publishers, hc

Trotsky, Leon: Literature and Revolution. Rose Strunsky, trans. [1925] -- International Publishers, hc

Trotsky, Leon: Whither England? [1925] -- International Publishers hc

Zinoviev, G.E.; Stalin, I.; and Kamenev, L.: Leninism or Trotskyism. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam; 5,000 printed.

Zur Mühlen, Herminia: Fairy Tales for Workers Children. Ida Dailes, trans. Illustrations by Lydia Gibson. [1925] -- children's book, large format, -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., hc and tpb.

Report of the Central Executive Committee to the 4th National Convention Held in Chicago, Illinois, August 21st to 30th, 1925: Resolutions of the Parity Commission and Others. [1925] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., tpb

Russia Today: Official Report of the British Trade Union Delegation Visiting Soviet Russia and the Caucasus. [1925] -- tpb; 5,000 printed.

 

Books and Pamphlets.

Barbusse, Henri: Chains. [fiction] [1926] -- International Publishers, hc

Bedacht, Max: The Menace of Opportunism: A Contribution to the Bolshevization of the Workers' (Communist) Party. [1926] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Benoit, Pierre: Jacob's Well. [fiction] [1926] -- International Publishers, hc

Berdnikov, A. and Svetlov, F.: Elements of Political Education. Notes by Alexander Bittelman. [1926] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., hc

Dolsen, James H.: The Awakening of China. [1926] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., tpb

Foster, William Z.: Organize the Unorganized. [c. 1926] -- Trade Union Educational League, pam (Labor Herald Library no. 17)

Foster, William Z.: Russian Workers and Workshops in 1926. [1926] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Flying Osip: Stories of New Russia. [fiction] [1926?] -- International Publishers hc

Hindus, Maurice: Broken Earth. [1926] -- International Publishers hc

Kautsky, Karl: Are the Jews a Race? [1926] -- International Publishers hc

Marx, Karl : The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. Eden Paul and Cedar Paul, trans. [1926] -- International Publishers hc

Nearing, Scott: Education in Soviet Russia. [1926] -- International Publishers tpb

Pepper, John: The General Strike and the General Betrayal. [1926] -- Workers (Communist) Party of America, tpb

Reed, John: Ten Days that Shook the World. [1926] -- International Publishers hc -- reprint of Boni & Liveright title.

Shachtman, Max: The Paris Commune. [1926]-- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 8)

Simons, A.M. Social Forces in American History. [1926] -- International Publishers hc -- reprint of Macmillan title.

Stalin, I.: The Theory and Practice of Leninism. [1926] -- Daily Worker Pub. Co., tpb; first publication of work later known as The Foundations of Leninism. 5,000 printed.

Trotsky, Leon: Whither Russia? Towards Capitalism or Socialism. [1926] -- International Publishers hc

Wolfe, Bertram D.: How Class Colaboration Works. [1926]-- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam (Little Red Library no. 9)

Wolfson, Theresa: The Woman Worker and the Trade Unions. [1926]-- (publisher?), hc

 

Books and Pamphlets.

Lassalle, Ferdinand: Voices of Revolt: Speeches of Ferdinand Lassalle with a Biographical Sketch. [1927]

Lovestone, Jay: The Labor Lieutenants of American Imperialism. [1927]-- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Lovestone, Jay: The Coolidge Program: Capitalist Democracy and Prosperity Exposed. [1927]-- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

Nearing, Scott: Whither China? An Economic Interpretation of Recent Events in the Far East. [1927]

Program of the Trade Union Educational League: Adopted by the Third National Conference, New York, December 3-4, 1927. [1927]-- Trade Union Educational League, pam

Riazanov, D.: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. [1927]

Russia After Ten Years: Report of the American Trade Union Delegation to the Soviet Union. [1927]

Stalin, Joseph; Tan-Ping-Shan; Manuilsky, Dimitry; and Bukharin, Nikolai: China in Revolt. [1927]-- no publisher listed [Daily Worker Pub. Co.], tpb

Stalin, Joseph: Questions and Answers to American Trade Unionists. Stalin's Interview with the First American Trade Union Delegation to Soviet Russia, September 9, 1927. Introduction by Jay Lovestone. [1927]-- Daily Worker Pub. Co., pam

The Youth and the Russian Revolution. [1927]-- Young Workers League, pam

 

Books and Pamphlets.

Foster, William Z. and Gitlow, Benjamin: Acceptance Speeches. [1928]

Jenks, M.: The Communist Nucleus: What It Is... How It Works. [1928]

Lovestone, Jay: 1928: The Presidential Election and the Workers. [1928]

Lovestone, Jay: America Prepares the Next War. [1928]

Molotov, V.: The Communist Party of the Soviet Union: The Question of Recruiting Members For, and the Regulations of the Composition of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union: The CPSU, the Working Class, the Peasants and the Government Machinery... [1928]

National Election Campaign Commiittee of the Workers (Communist) Party: The Platform of the Class Struggle: National Platform of the Workers (Communist) Party. [1928]

 

Books and Pamphlets.

Dunne, William F.: Gastonia: Citadel of the Class Struggle in the New South. [1929]

Page, Myra: Southern Cotton Mills and Labor. [1929]

On the Road to Bolshevization. [1929]

 

 

Books and Pamphlets.

Central Committee, CPUSA: Thesis and Resolutions for the Seventh Natonal Convention of the Communist Party of USA: By Central Committee Plenum, March 31-April 4, 1930. [1930]

Cameron, Donald A.: Chemical Warfare. [1930]

Hall, Henry: War in the Far East. [1930]

Holmes, W.M.: The Wreckers Exposed: In the Trial of the Counter-Revolutionary Industrial Party. [1930]

Kaganovich, L. et. al.: The Life of Stalin: A Symposium. [1930]

Molotov, V.M.: The Developing Crisis of World Capitalism: The Revolutionary Crisis and the Tasks of the Comintern. [1930]

Stalin, J.: Political Report to the Sixteenth Party Congress of the Russian Communist Party. [1930]

 

 

 

Books

 

Debs, Eugene: Voices of Revolt: Eugene V. Debs. [1928]

Price, George M.: Labor Protection in Soviet Russia. [1928]

Stalin, Joseph: Leninism. [1928]

Dunn, Robert W.: Labor and Automobiles. [1929]

Grinko, G.T.: The 5 Year Plan of the Soviet Union: A Political Interpretation. [1930]

 


For a complete English-language bibliography of books and pamphlets by Stalin and Molotov, published by the American Communist movement and elsewhere, click here.