Spence, recognizes
that we are, indeed, slaves to the New Master, the corporate
and government monsters who own us and control us and
make our democracy a mockery and our lives a subtle
form of slavery. Everyone yearns for personal freedom,
every boss, every worker, every CEO, every maid, every
salesman, every lawyer, every Tom Dick and Harry wants
to be free. Without freedom we are only high class slaves
in a high class cotton field. So how do we get it? Spence
has laid out seven simple steps to personal freedom
Again, Abner Hill is called upon to defend a Wyoming ranch hand against a charge of murder. What natural rights did Ben Eckersly have, despite the law, to take the law into his own hands and seek revenge against the man who raped his wife? Yet, was it rape? Did his wife actually give herself to the alleged rapist to save Little Ben, their son and the chief protagonist in the story? And how are such choices reflected in the law? At last the book examines the issue of prostitution--who are the real prostitutes in the town of Laramie, Wyoming? The women on Front Street in the houses or....the book takes us to a surprise ending that gives us a powerful and dramatic renewal of our own sense of love and hate.
Dead End
(provisional title) The true story of Spence's epic
defense of Sandy Jones in Oregon. The problem was that
the prosecution had a photo taken at the time of the
alleged murder with Sandy Jones holding her rifle and
the smoke coming out the end of the barrel, the photo
taken by the wife of the deceased at the time he was
shot.