Ginger focuses on
Albert Goodwin's life from his arrival on Vancouver Island in late 1910, to his death on 27 July 1918, which is surrounded in controversy. When Goodwin began working the
Cumberland mines, he found the working conditions appalling and convinced his
local union to "down tools" in protest. These actions spread encouragement for others to join in
civil disobedience and led to the coal mining strike of 1912. The strike failed to achieve the workers' goals but is measured as one of Canada's most expensive economic burdens. Goodwin was "
blackballed" for his role and never found employment in mining operations again. Goodwin went on to work in the local
smelters union where he again organized labour, steadily gaining prominence. By 1917, he became vice-president of the
British Columbia Federation of Labour, president of the
International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers (IUMMSW), and president of the
Trail Trades and Labour Council. Using his influence, Goodwin rallied for the adoption of a standard eight-hour work day but would be shot dead by
Constable Daniel Campbell of the
Dominion Police before achieving this goal. Goodwin was killed in a wilderness area near Cumberland while on the run for
draft evasion. As Mayse states in the book, "there is still controversy about the circumstances of the shooting." Goodwin's death ignited Canada's first
general strike and he is still called a "martyr" . The biography runs 212 pages, and includes a topical index, maps of locations involved, and black-and-white archival photographs. ==Reception==