Description
Face Boss tells a story that few people have heard: what it is truly like to labor inside the dark and dangerous world of a vast underground coal mine. With unflinching honesty, in addition to considerable humor and insight, Michael Guillerman recalls his nearly eighteen years of working as both a union miner and a salaried section foreman-or “face boss”-at the Peabody Coal Company’s Camp No. 2 mine in Union County, Kentucky.
Guillerman undertook this memoir as a result of the many misconceptions about coal mining that were evidenced most recently in the media coverage of the 2006 Sago Mine disaster. Shedding some much-needed light on this little-understood topic, Face Boss is riveting, authentic, and continuously raw. Guillerman describes in stark detail the risks, dangers, and uncertainties of coal mining: the wildcat and contract strikes, layoffs, shutdowns, mine fires, methane ignitions, squeezes, and injuries. But he also discusses the good times that emerged despite perilous working conditions: the camaraderie and immense sense of accomplishment that came with mining hundreds of tons of coal on a daily basis. Along the way, Guillerman spices his narrative with a lot of anecdotes from his many years on the job and discusses race relations within mining culture and the expanding role of women in the industry.
While the book contributes significantly to the general knowledge of up to date mining, Face Boss is also a tribute to those women and men who toil anonymously beneath the rolling hills of western Kentucky and the other coal-rich regions of the US. More than just the story of one man’s life and career, this is a stirring testament to the ingenuity, courage, and perseverance of the American coal miner.