Afbeelding van de auteur.
5 Werken 211 Leden 10 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Gabriel Thompson is the author of There's No Jos Here and Calling All Radicals, and has written for New York, The Nation, the New York Times, and others. The recipient of the Richard J. Margolis Award, the Studs Terkel Media Award, and a collective Sidney Hillman Award, Thompson lives in Brooklyn, toon meer New York. toon minder

Werken van Gabriel Thompson

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Leden

Besprekingen

Easily one of the best books I've read so far this year, but also one of the most disturbing.
 
Gemarkeerd
jasoncomely | 6 andere besprekingen | Jun 26, 2018 |
It's a good book. I've never read Nickled and Dimed, but this isn't really the same book as that anyway. In Nickled and Dimed the author wanted to try and live on minimum wage. This is more about the jobs than the money, although as with all life these days, money is always present in the book as well.

He gets four jobs, three of them for approximately two months. Lettuce cutter (I didn't know that you didn't pick it, but cut it, although now it does make sense that you have to cut it). Chicken plant worker, florist lackey for a couple of days and a restaurant bike delivery boy.

I picked up the book to read because of the chicken plant section. But, it wasn't the chicken planet in Alabama that was the most disturbing of the workplaces in the book. (Although none of them were great by any means of the imagination) The worst was the florist shop in New York. I've never been well acquainted with the cut flower business. The flowers I know most about are the ones in pots and in the ground. But, the fact that in such a city as New York there could be such horrendous working conditions is depressing. Everyone is a human, no matter if they're breaking the law (i.e. illegal immigrants) or not, and should be treated like humans and not animals.

It was an interesting book and a thought provoking one too.
… (meer)
1 stem
Gemarkeerd
DanieXJ | 6 andere besprekingen | Nov 1, 2013 |
Thompspon offers a revealing look into the working lives and conditions of immigrant labor in the United States. In the immersion journalism style of such authors as Barbara Ehrenreich, Thompson goes undercover for one year, working in several different industries that rely on undocumented workers and describes the types of work often performed by these workers with insight on how industries are been able to exploit them.
 
Gemarkeerd
Sullywriter | 6 andere besprekingen | Apr 3, 2013 |
What does it mean to work in fields predominantly staffed by either illegal or recent immigrants? In some cases, exploitation, in others, discrimination, in others, abuse, and in some, respect and dignity. None of the jobs investigated by Thompson were lucrative, and some were illegally low paying -- but considered in terms of purchasing power in Mexico or Guatamala, where many of these workers had family, these jobs represented opportunity for a better life. A well-written and interesting first person story of working beside immigrants , if only for a brief time.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
Meggo | 6 andere besprekingen | Jun 25, 2011 |

Misschien vindt je deze ook leuk

Statistieken

Werken
5
Leden
211
Waardering
4.0
Besprekingen
10
ISBNs
14

Tabellen & Grafieken