Kirjailija
Esme Mees
Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 25 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 2024-2026, suosituimpien joukossa Fascism Speaks. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.
25 kirjaa
Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 2024-2026.
Fascism Speaks: Propaganda Paige & The Dawn of Prosperity is the last and most human chapter in the EATMS "Fascism Speaks" series, the moment when the smoke clears and you realize the war never really ended, it just changed uniforms. Paige walks straight into Berlin, 1942, into the Fortress of Prosperity, where money, power, and faith have learned to speak the same language. She's done running through time. Now she's inside the heart of the lie, pulling the wires from the inside. This isn't a story about good versus evil, it's about what happens when people stop pretending not to notice. The generals, the bankers, the priests, all of them built a world that sold fear as faith and profit as peace. Paige just reminds them what honesty looks like when it bleeds. With a foreword by Esme Mees, this EATMS Production closes the Paige cycle with something rare, hope that doesn't lie. The Dawn of Prosperity isn't about her anymore. It's about us. The Fold may flicker, but the light that matters is the one we keep lit.
Fascism Speaks: Propaganda Paige and the Last Bastion by Sable Moncrieff is another blistering, cinematic chapter in the Paige saga from EATMS Productions, still unafraid to drag history through the correction it deserves. With a foreword by Esme Mees, in this installment, Paige shows up in the quiet after the war, watching the same people who caused the mess switch out their uniforms for offices and pretend that makes them civilized. In Berlin, London, Rome, and Zurich, she cuts through the illusions of recovery, bankers, priests, and bureaucrats selling moral order while rebuilding the same machines of control. The Fold that carried her through time begins to unravel, showing her that she wasn't rewriting history at all, she was its product. By the time she reaches the Museum of Progress, surrounded by children posing with bayonets, Paige realizes the war never ended, it just rebranded.
Fascism Speaks: Propaganda Paige and The Rising TIDE by Sable Moncrieff is the latest brutal, smart, and darkly funny installment in the Paige series from EATMS Productions, a collective known for pushing right up against the edge of comfort and history. With a foreword by Esme Mees, this chapter drops Paige into 1914-1918 Europe, where she dismantles industrialized death from the inside out. Factories, telegram rooms, U-boats, even propaganda reels, Paige turns every tool of empire against its masters. This isn't nostalgia for the "good war." It's a story about the machinery of obedience, how it keeps running long after the shooting stops. Paige moves through mud, smoke, and bureaucratic rot with a cigarette in one hand and a grim kind of mercy in the other. Propaganda Paige and the Rising TIDE reads like history's hangover: a reminder that progress always finds new uniforms. And in a time when truth itself feels like propaganda, Paige's ghost still walks the floor, reminding us who built the machine, and who gets ground up inside it.
Propaganda Paige and the Prosperity Alliance drops you into the smoke and rot of 1880s London, where men carve up continents over champagne and call it progress. Forward by Esme Mees of EATMS Productions. Propaganda Paige returns through time for another round of correcting history's misguided past. Sent to wipe out the last of the Prosperity Alliance, the bankers, generals, and politicians who built their fortunes on blood, Paige walks through their world like a reckoning with good aim. From Berlin's boardrooms to London's burning docks, she cleans up the messes of men history still calls heroes. Paige has no time for that. She doesn't argue. She ends the conversation. This is what happens when power finally meets someone who doesn't buy the lie. Violent, sharp, and darkly funny, The Prosperity Alliance shows the kind of justice that doesn't ask for permission. If you've ever wondered how empires meet their expiration date, Paige gives you the answer.
Ban Billionaires: Fascism Fix by Esme Mees and Rita Shelby explores billionaire wealth-hoarding mental illness and the moral decay it breeds. Esme's incisive critique dismantles the myths of meritocracy and trickle-down economics, exposing billionaires not just as exploiters of labor and ecosystems, but as sociopaths-or even demons-whose insatiable greed has brought humanity to the brink. Rita's worker-inspired narratives weave together the stories of ordinary people crushed under the weight of corporate tyranny, offering a haunting yet hopeful look at resilience and opposition. The book is illustrated with classic Mees and Eatms Productions black-and-white woodblock prints, evoking the stark crossroads between good and evil where humanity now stands. These visuals amplify the text's urgency, capturing the moral and ecological devastation wrought by billionaire hoarding. Ban Billionaires critique urges readers to confront the systems enabling such destruction and fight for a future rooted in humanity. With its blend of analysis, storytelling, and art, this book is a powerful reminder that the fight against greed is a fight worth having, the alternative is too dire to imagine, alas, that is our near and long-term reality if we all do nothing.
How to Survive as a Woman In Post America Project 2025
Esme Mees; Alice Horton
Publishdrive
2024
pokkari
How to Survive as a Woman in Post-America Project 2025 is a fiercely honest survival guide for navigating the fractured landscape of a country dismantling rights and freedoms. Authored by Esme Mees and introducing Alice Horton, this book delivers hard-earned wisdom and actionable strategies for women caught in the crosshairs of a system that values control over humanity. It examines the erosion of autonomy and community safety nets with a clarity that refuses to flinch. Each chapter offers tools for reclaiming agency, building solidarity, and preparing for the uncertainties ahead. This isn't about merely enduring-it's about resisting, thriving, and forging a path toward dignity and justice. Grounded in resilience and truth, this guide is a call to action for anyone ready to stand against oppression and rewrite what survival means in a hostile world.
"Tariffs, Taxes & Face-Eating Leopards" delivers a biting critique of modern economic policies, likening the impact of tariffs to predatory leopards feasting on the financial stability of everyday citizens. With sharp wit and sardonic humor, Esme Mees & new author Sandy Khiro expose how tariffs, disguised as tools of national strength, often serve as stealth taxes that burden consumers, crush small businesses, and destabilize industries while leaving the powerful untouched. Paired with classic Esme Mees black-and-white woodcut-style prints of leopards, the book's visuals amplify its scathing analysis, capturing the relentless and unapologetic nature of policies that prey on the vulnerable. Mees peels back the fa ade of economic patriotism, revealing the systemic greed and inequality behind the rhetoric. Both a critique and a call to action, this work invites readers to confront the leopards in their midst and reconsider the true costs of policies that claim to protect them. Bold, vivid, and unforgettable, it challenges us to stop feeding the predators and start reclaiming control.
Immerse yourself in the stark and cautionary world of Selfish Steve, the first book in the Empathy Island series by Esme Mees. This modern tale, inspired by the grim morality of classic fairy tales, unfolds during an era of unchecked capitalism and societal upheaval. Illustrated with evocative black-and-white woodblock drawings, the story explores the downfall of a boy isolated in his ivory tower of wealth and indifference. Steve's selfishness contrasts sharply with the resilience and kindness of villagers like Larry and Jane, who, despite hardships, find strength in unity. As their world rebuilds and his crumbles, this tale serves as a haunting critique of greed and the transformative power of empathy. Perfect for readers seeking thought-provoking narratives with a timeless artistic aesthetic.
"4B" by Esme Mees is a manifesto, inspired by the South Korean Movement of the same name, for the brave and the bold, a no-nonsense guide to burning down the tired old systems of power that keep us shackled. It's a call to action, not just for women, but for anyone tired of watching the same oppressive cycle unfold. With a sharp, unapologetic tone, Mees lays out the 4B Movement-Burn, Ban, Boycott, Build-as the blueprint for change. Forget polite protests and feel-good rallies. This book is about real, visceral action: rejecting what doesn't serve us, hitting back at the systems that profit from inequality, and building something new from the ashes. Mees challenges oppressive systems and includes powerful references to female art, artists, and literature, and for finding community amongst women in the face of adversity. You are not alone when reading this book or taking action. The book underscores the significance of creative expression for resistance and healing, celebrating women's voices and their ability to reshape the cultural landscape. The pages are filled with barbed wit, sharp truths, and serene yet arresting black-and-white photographs that contrast the urgency of the words. These images are stark and powerful, reflecting the book's message: change is messy but necessary. Mees doesn't sugarcoat anything-this is about transforming society, and it demands everything you've got. No more playing nice, it's time to fight for something better. The work concludes with a fable and a legend, offering a hopeful, transformational vision of a better tomorrow-one where power is redefined, and equality and compassion reign supreme. Another good one from Esme Mees.
Imagine a world where the absurdity of wealth hoarding meets sharp wit and unapologetic satire. Self-Help for American Billionaires A Parody is your one-way ticket to that world. With biting commentary and brilliant black-and-white woodblock print illustrations that evoke the stark truths of history, Esme Mees pulls no punches. This is not a guide to becoming a better billionaire-it's a scathing exploration of how obscene wealth and unchecked greed rot the foundation of society. Drawing from the insanities of late-stage capitalism, Mees delivers a series of chapters brimming with sarcastic affirmations, ruthless strategies, and the twisted rationalizations billionaires use to maintain their empires. From "Networking on Super Yachts" to "The Art of Hoarding," this parody strips away the glamour and exposes the underlying sickness of greed. Complete with visual storytelling that's as striking as it is meaningful, this book is a must-read for anyone ready to laugh at, and critically examine, the gilded absurdities of wealth.