Sam Wallman is a comics journalist and cartoonist based in Melbourne, Australia. His drawings have been published in The Guardian, The New York Times, The Age, the ABC, and SBS.
‘Sam Wallman’s comic is history and argument, it is celebration and
reflection, and with every turn of its beautiful, vivid pages it is
a reminder of the galvanising power of radical solidarity and of
radical love. This book is a gift, it’s exhilarating.’
*Christos Tsiolkas, author of The Slap*
‘In a narrative that moves from trade-union history to his own
efforts organising in an Amazon warehouse, Sam Wallman draws
honest, unsentimental portraits of the working class that was and
the working class that is. Most of all, he shares a vision of the
working class that could be, depicting the everyday decency of
ordinary people as the only hope for a world in crisis. Funny,
tender, and wise, this book both delights and inspires.’
*Jeff Sparrow, author of Crimes Against Nature*
‘Unionism is about more than your rights at work. It is something
greater even than a form of politics at the point of production:
union struggle is composed of those mundane moments of perseverance
and ingenuity in daily life that are all too easy to pass over in
retrospect. This is the history that Sam Wallman uncovers in his
magnificent new longform comic, Our Members Be Unlimited … With his
unmistakable animated and intricate graphic style, Wallman is
skilled at stitching these quotidian details into a broader
narrative of working-class history … Learned and extensively
researched, this book is also practical, ending with a sizeable
glossary of useful union terms, from ‘black cat’ to ‘ultra’.
Wallman’s activist energy, familiar to anyone who has read his
shorter comics or seen his posters pasted up around their city,
makes this graphic history urgent and invigorating reading.’
*Books+Publishing*
‘Our Members Be Unlimited is a beautiful and often moving guide to
union organising that’s in touch with the reality of work today.
Sam Wallman draws on the history of working-class resistance and
the humanism at the heart of our movement to guide and give heart
to activists.’
*Bhaskar Sunkara, founding editor of Jacobin magazine*
‘Beautiful, bold, and necessary. An original and timely look at
labour’s past and present that shows how workers won the rights we
have and how they’ll be taken away if we don’t use our power to
keep them and build on them.’
*Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight
Attendants–CWA*
‘[Our Members Be Unlimited is a] textured, extensively researched
work … The artist’s bold style, consisting mainly of primary
colours, makes the work visually compelling … His creative agility
demonstrates the many possibilities of comics … What’s hugely
evident across the work is Wallman’s passion for, and belief in, a
better world.’
*The Sydney Morning Herald*
‘Sam Wallman has written an inspiring and uplifting visual history
of the [union] movement … [his] distinctive style, wit, and
historical knowledge make this something to relish.’
*The Sydney Morning Herald*
‘Sam Wallman’s book is an insight both personal and historical into
a collectivist alternative to capitalism that has existed as long
as there have been bosses … Wallman is ambitious enough to take
comics to areas that are hard to explain, where the message may be
complex but the stories are simple. … [Our Members Be Unlimited] is
a book that asks readers to read slowly and pay attention to the
subtleties.’
*ArtsHub*
‘Our Members Be Unlimited ... rallies for workers’ rights in a
journalistic comics account of past and present struggles in global
and local labour organising, including recent battles fought in
Amazon warehouses and with the New York City Taxi Workers
Alliance.’
*Publishers Weekly*
‘Our Members be Unlimited offers an entertaining, well-researched
and accessible history of unionism … [Each page] is designed with
the confidence and urgency of a poster.’
*Overland*
‘Stylistically, Wallman deftly manages the complex use of space -
at times like MC Escher or Diego Rivera, also taking inspiration
from early trade union banners … Unique and urgent, Our Members Be
Unlimited is aimed at a broad audience and well deserves to reach
it.’
*Green Left*
‘Creatively, intellectually, politically, emotionally, Wallman has
produced a remarkable work. Our Members Be Unlimited is a robust
and distinguished contribution to the long Australian tradition of
interactions between artists and the labour movement going back to
its birth years in the nineteenth century.’
*Recorder*
‘No artwork or book has the same power as rank-and-file workplace
organising. But if it reaches a wide enough audience, the book
might help amplify the emerging wave of union organisation, from US
Amazon warehouse workers to cleaners and health care workers in
Australia. Our Members Be Unlimited helps us realise that, when we
build union solidarity in the workplace, our efforts go beyond
wages and conditions — rekindling the old spirit of collectivism is
how we build a better future for humanity.’
*Jacobin*
‘A fantastic work.’
*Red Tape*
‘In Our Members Be Unlimited, comics journalist Wallman achieves
what many on the left struggle with: he makes history, theory, and
organising practice accessible and fun to read about … Deftly
mixing personal experience, journalism, and history, he highlights
not just the highs but also the lows of union history. Throughout,
he makes extensive use of imaginative spreads that blend
traditional comics layouts with artwork more commonly found on
murals and activist posters … hits so powerfully you can’t help but
want to share. Hand this to any reader interested in labour
movements, comics fans or not.’
*Booklist*
‘A stunner — a bold visual history of workers’ struggles; a
mini-memoir of Wallman’s time working as a picker (and shop floor
organiser) in an Amazon warehouse; and a compelling
intro-slash-invitation to union activism.’
*Powell's Books*
‘Activist and comics journalist Wallman debuts with a convincing,
transfixing graphic history of the impact and future potential of
unions … This is a dynamic, persuasive look at labor power.’
*Publishers Weekly*
‘Our Members Be Unlimited is a half-historical
half-autobiographical novel of the slow progress of unionisation
across the world. If there’s anything to glean from this, it’s that
no one can be expected to stand defiantly on their own … and that
there’s a benefit to being part of a collective in pursuit of
freedom — whether that liberation is from British capitalism in the
1600s or from one of the most profitable and tyrannical companies
known today. (You know which one I’m talking about.)’
*Rediscovered Bookshop*
‘In this artfully illustrated book of comic history, author Sam
Wallman documents recent gains made by organised labour while
offering the reader a look back at the struggle for worker rights.
A great introduction for younger readers looking to familiarise
themselves with the labour movement, this comic book offers a
humorous and educational perspective on the challenges facing
unions in the 21st century, and the way those challenges differ
from the struggles of workers in previous centuries.’
*Microcosm Publishing*
‘[A]n engaging visual exploration of the history of unions and why
they matter … Wallman’s distinctive style and outlook make for a
fun read, and are nuanced enough to be a good starting point for
union educational activities and discussions.’
*Our Times*
‘[Our Members Be Unlimited] is entertaining and amusing, yet
serious and informative global history of unionism.’
*open book*
‘Our Members Be Unlimited by Sam Wallman is an immense achievement.
Both a history of the union moment and a personal memoir of
Wallman’s own experience of working as a picker at an Amazon
warehouse, the personal is political and the political is intensely
felt and personal. The graphic medium allows for dense information
to be told in an accessible way, while images of the body speak
directly to the body of the reader, we recognise the burden of
exploitation as an embodied reality. Timely, but also a book that
will remain relevant, sadly, for a long time, this important book
could play a role in helping younger generations engage with what
it means to collectivise and unionise and make informed choices
about navigating a lifetime of labour; this book should be
considered for secondary curriculums.’
*Judges comments from The Small Press Network Book of Year Award
2023*
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