Famous but not very readable
This autobiographical work by Berkman, who tried to assassinate Frick, the head of the steelworks who was anti labor, is a famous companion to Emma Goldman's book, "Living My Life."
And while it does, what her book describes - documenting his 22 years in prison - it simply alternates between the theologies of anarchist rhetoric and descriptions of what prison life was like.
The book is longer than it needs to be to do this, and I gave up reading it after only a hundred pages or so as not contributing to the history of the era as Goldman's book does.