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Now and After: The ABC of Communist Anarchism distills anarchist communism into a lucid catechism of questions, objections, and practical answers. Rejecting both capitalist exploitation and Bolshevik centralism, Berkman explains wages, property, state power, revolution, and social reconstruction in plain, persuasive prose. Its conversational style belongs to the great tradition of nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century radical pamphleteering, yet its careful distinctions between liberty, equality, organization, and coercion give it enduring theoretical seriousness. Alexander Berkman (1870-1936), Russian-born Jewish anarchist, brought to the book a life marked by militancy, imprisonment, exile, and reflection. His attempted assassination of industrialist Henry Clay Frick after the Homestead strike led to fourteen years in prison; later, with Emma Goldman, he opposed war, endured deportation, and witnessed the Russian Revolution's degeneration. Now and After reflects a veteran revolutionary's effort to rescue emancipation from authoritarian substitutes. This book is recommended for readers seeking an accessible entry into anarchist thought, but also for specialists interested in libertarian socialism after 1917. Berkman's arguments are uncompromising without being obscure, ethical without sentimentality, and practical without technocratic illusion. Read today, it challenges anyone concerned with democracy, labor, and freedom to imagine social order beyond domination.