Particularly praised was The Battle Of Blair Mountain: The Story Of America's Largest Labor Uprising, published in 2004.
Kirkus Reviews called it "a stunning re-creation of the great West Virginia uprising of 1921 ... crackingly told.
"[3] The Journal of Appalachian Studies declared that "among other successes, this book presents a valuable short history of the U.S. labor movement and its discontents through crystalline evocations of figures like Samuel Gompers, John L. Lewis, the Wobblies, and Mother Jones.
"[4] Greil Marcus, in a revised edition of The Old, Weird America: The World of Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes, cited it as a worthy source about the Battle of Blair Mountain.
[5] Publishers Weekly wrote that Bad News: Where the Press Goes Wrong in the Making of the President, published in 2001, was a "carefully crafted retrospective on the media and presidential campaigns since JFK ... a highly readable chronicle.