Item Description
The bestselling, landmark work of undercover reportage, now updatedAcclaimed as an instant classic upon publication, Nickel and Dimed has sold more than 1.5 million copies and become a staple of classroom reading. Chosen for one bookâ initiatives across the country, it has fueled nationwide campaigns for a living wage. Funny, poignant, and passionate, this revelatory firsthand account of life in low-wage Americathe story of Barbara Ehrenreichâs attempts to eke out a living while working as a waitress, hotel maid, house cleaner, nursing-home aide, and Wal-Mart associatehas become an essential part of the nationâs political discourse.Now, in a new afterword, Ehrenreich shows that the plight of the underpaid has in no way eased: with fewer jobs available, deteriorating work conditions, and no pay increase in sight, Nickel and Dimed is more relevant than ever. Barbara Ehrenreich is the author of fourteen books, including Dancing in the Streets and The New York Times bestsellers Nickel and Dimed and Bait and Switch. A frequent contributor to Harperâs and The Nation, she has also been a columnist at The New York Times and Time magazine. In 2010, Nickel and Dimed was named one of the decade's top ten works of journalism by the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University. Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book PrizeMillions of Americans work full-time, year-round, for poverty-level wages. Inspired in part by the rhetoric surrounding welfare reform, which promised that a jobany jobcan be the ticket to a better life, Barbara Ehrenreich decided to join them. But how does anyone survive, let alone prosper, on $6 an hour? To find out, Ehrenreich left her home, took the cheapest lodgings she could find, and accepted whatever jobs she was offered. Moving from Florida to Maine to Minnesota, she worked as a waitress, a hotel maid, a cleaning woman, a nursing home aide, and a Wal-Mart sales clerk. She lived in trailer parks and crumbling residential motels. Very quickly, she discovered that no job is truly "unskilled," that even the lowliest occupations require exhausting mental and muscular effort. She also learned that one job is not enough; you need at least two if you intend to live indoors.Nickel and Dimed reveals low-rent America in all its tenacity, anxiety, and surprising generositya land of Big Boxes, fast food, and a thousand desperate strategems for survival. Read it for the clarity of Ehrenreich's perspective and for a rare view of how "prosperity" looks from the bottom. "A valuable and illuminating book . . . We have Barbara Ehrenreich to thank for bringing us the news of America's working poor so clearly and directly, and conveying with it a deep moral outrage . . . She is our premier reporter of the underside of capitalism."Dorothy Gallagher, The New York Times Book Review "A valuable and illuminating book . . . We have Barbara Ehrenreich to thank for bringing us the news of America's working poor so clearly and directly, and conveying with it a deep moral outrage . . . She is our premier reporter of the underside of capitalism."Dorothy Gallagher, The New York Times Book Review"Nickel and Dimed is a superb and frightening look into the lives of hard-working Americans . . . policymakers should be forced to read the last ten pages of Ehrenreich's book in which she concludes that affordable rent, food and health care should be among the chief measurements of a healthy economy, not simply high productivity and employment."Tamara Straus, San Francisco Chronicle"This book is thoroughly enjoyable, written with an affable, up-your-nose brio throughout. Ehrenreich is a superb and relaxed stylist, and she has a tremendous sense of rueful humor, especially when it comes to the evils of middle-management, absentee ownership and all the little self-consecrating bourgeois touches gracing the homes she sterilizes, inch-by-square-inch, as a maid in Maine."Stephen Metcalf, Los Angeles Times"With grace and wit, Ehrenreich discovers the irony of being 'nickel and dimed' during unprecedented prosperity . . . Living wages, she elegantly shows, might erase the shame that comes from our dependence 'on the underpaid labor of others."Eileen Boris, The Boston Globe"A captivating account . . . Just promise that you will read this explosive little book cover to cover and pass it on to all your friends and relatives."Diana Henriques, The New York Times"There is much to be learned from Nickel and Dimed. It opens a window into the daily lives of the invisible workforce that fuels the service economy, and endows the men and women who populate it with the honor that is often lacking on the job . . . In the grand tradition of the muckraking journalist, [Ehrenreich] goes undercover for nearly a year . . . What emerges is an insider's view of the worst jobs (other than agricultural labor) the 'new economy' has to offer."Katherine Newman, The Washington Post Book World"Ehrenreich is a wonderful writer. Her descriptions of people and places stay with you. If nothing else, this book illuminates the invisible army that scrubs floors, waits tables and straightens the racks at discount stores. That alone makes Ehrenreich's odyssey worthwhile."Sandy Block, USA Today"Nickel and Dimed is an 'old-fashioned,' in-your-face exposé . . . this important volume will force anyone who reads it to acknowledge the often desperate plight of Ehrenreich's subjects."Anne Colamosca, Business Week"Jarring, full of riveting grit . . . This book is already unforgettable."Susannah Meadows, Newsweek"I commend Barbara Ehrenreich for conducting such an important experiment. Millions of Americans suffer daily trying to make ends meet. Ehrenreich's book forces people to acknowledge the average worker's struggle and promises to be extremely influential."Lynn Woolsey, U.S. Congress, Representing California's Sixth District"A brilliant on-the-job report from the dark side of the boom. No one since H.L. Mencken has assailed the smug rhetoric of prosperity with such scalpel-like precision and ferocious wit."Mike Davis, author of Ecology of Fear"With this book Barbara Ehrenreich takes her place among such giants of investigative journalism as George Orwell and Jack London. Ehrenreich's courage, empathy, and the immediacy with which she describes her experience bring us face to face with the fate of millions of American workers today."Frances Fox Piven, author of Regulating the Poor"I was absolutely knocked out by Barbara Ehrenreich's remarkable odyssey as a waitress, hotel maid, cleaning woman, nursing home aide and sales clerk. She has accomplished what no contemporary writer has even attemptedto be that 'nobody' who barely subsists on her essential labors. It is a stiff punch in the nose to those righteous apostles of 'welfare reform.' Not only is it must reading but it's mesmeric. You can't put the damn thing down. Bravo!"Studs Terkel, author of Working"One of the great American social critics, Barbara Ehrenreich has written an unforgettable memoir of what it was like to work in some of America's least attractive jobs. Nickel and Dimed is a passionate meditation on the blindness of those with money and power. It is one of those rare books that will provoke both outrage and self-reflection. No one who reads this book will be able to resist its power to make them see the world in a new way."Mitchell Duneier, author of Sidewalk"Drunk on dot-coms and day trading, America has gone blind to the down side of its great prosperity. In Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich does more than open her own eyes wide to the hidden human costs of the boom. She immerses herself in the practicalities of being poor, a subject rendered exotic by decades of media neglect. Once inside, Ehrenreich expertly peals away the layers of self-denial, self-interest and self-protection that separate the rich from poor, the served from the servers, the housed from the homeless. This is a brave and frank book that is ultimately a challenge to create a less divided society."Naomi Klein, author of No Logo"A tough, engaging, revealing look at life as a low-wage worker . . . Sobering."Shelley Donald Coolidge, Christian Science Monitor"Barbara Ehrenreich is the Thorstein Veblen of the 21st century. And this book is one of her very bestbreathtaking in its scope, insight, humor, and passion."Arlie Russell Hochschild, author of The Time Bind"Between spring 1998 and summer 2000, Barbara Ehrenreich entered the world of service work. She folded clothes at Wal-Mart, waitressed, washed dishes in a nursing home, and scrubbed floors 'the old fashioned wayon her hands and knees' for The Maids. Her account of those experiences is unforgettableheart-wrenching, infuriating, funny, smart, and empowering. Few readers will be untouched by the shameful realities which underlie America's boom economy. Nickel and Dimed is vintage Ehrenreich and will surely take its place among the classics of underground reportage."Juliet Schor, author of The Overworked American"Barbara Ehrenreich's new book is absolutely riveting. I was drawn into the narrative so quickly that it took me 50 pages to remember to get ...
Product Details
- Author: Barbara Ehrenreich
- Publication Date: 2008-06-24
- Publisher: Holt Paperbacks
- Product Group: Book
- Manufacturer: Holt Paperbacks
- Binding: Paperback, 240 pages
- Features:
- ISBN13: 9780805088380
- Condition: USED - Very Good
- Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed
- Package Dimensions:
- Dimensions: 800L x 520W x 80H
- Weight: 45
- List Price: $15.00
- ISBN: 0805088385
- ASIN: 0805088385
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Customer Reviews
Average Amazon User Rating: ![]()
We get it! You have a Ph.D.!
2010-07-15
Reviewer: Lily
My book club selected this, I doubt I would have selected it on my own. At first, I found the author's sarcasm entertaining. Eventually it just got on my nerves. Did she have to keep reminding us that she was a writer with an advanced degree? I enjoyed some portions of this book but I cannot give it more than a 2 star rating.
Loved it, but check it out from the library.
2010-07-09
Reviewer: Gladhill
I found this book at the library and had to read it. I enjoyed reading at my job that would have fit into this book. It made me look at my work in a new light and I was glad to have my job which was better than the ones she was working when writing the book. I read it as more of an inside look at how things work than seeing if she could make it.
By the way, I would never buy the book, that's why we have libraries.
Insufferably arrogant; inexcusably insulting
2010-07-07
Reviewer: Steve
Don't let the "bestseller" status and paeans of praise on the front (and back (and inside front)) cover deceive you ... this book is laughably bad. And I mean BAD. My wife and I spent a four-hour car ride reading passages to each other out of sheer entertainment. Imagine my surprise to learn that, as a public schoolteacher, I have been invited to a "party" the likes of which America's waitresses and sanitary workers could never hope to attend (p. 117). And that's just one silly sentence out of a whole book of similar faux pas. Ms. Ehrenreich comes across as a bona fide snob, every bit as obnoxious as she (fairly or unfairly) imagines the owners of the homes she cleans to be--all that distinguishes Ehrenreich is her indomitable self-righteousness. What's most irritating is that she's taken what was a terrific concept--live as a blue collar wage-earner and report on how tough it is to get by in America--and turned it into a monstrous ego trip. She takes jobs (for no longer than a month), waxes "philosophical" about the misery of her fellow employees (none of whom, incidentally, would likely describe themselves in such a way), then cuts and runs when things get rough. None of the "miseries" she lists are all that bad, so she piles on pathos-laden adjectives to amp up the drama. Most inexcusably, she rarely gives voice to the people about whom she is allegedly so concerned. Make no mistake--this book is not really about America's working class; it's about Ehrenreich, and she does a fine job revealing her own incompetence on every page. If Ehrenrich is the new spokesperson of the American underclass, then God help the American underclass. (Speaking of God, did I mention the irrelevant pages she devotes to explaining her own atheism? Oh yes, she attends a Sunday service out of boredom, then goes on to rip God and his followers a new one.)
I could go on and on. Please don't be taken in by the hype. I rarely give one star ratings, but this tripe is deserving of no more. Somewhere out there is a writer/reporter capable of handling this story--someone with integrity, insight, and compassion. It shouldn't be tough for that writer to send this book where it belongs: to the remainder rack.
The other America...
2010-07-06
Reviewer: T Pace
Excellent book showing how people who earn the least get ripped off and left vulnerable in the world's richest country.
I am now a really big tipper like most people who read the book!
Everyone must read
2010-07-06
Reviewer: Honesty
This book everyone must read especially those in middle class and above. It if it has been years, perhaps since high school, that you had to work a min. wage job, you need to read this and remind yourself. Remind yourself of what it was like to live with min. wage bosses and wages. Reading this should give you empathy for those workers ringing you out or assisting you with your purchase and/or serving you food.
It is also important that the American population KNOWS that Americans can not survive on min. wage. And min. wage workers aren't all high school drop outs or immigrants or ex-addicts...That is a fallacy. Min. wage workers are high school and college graduates. As a food server myself, three out of five employees would have a college degree. Many are often real estate agents not making ends meet. But food servers have it great compared to retail workers. Retails works only make min. wage. As Barbara proves, min. wage does not allow for a person to support themselves. It is sad. Or as she puts it a "shame" when someone can work 40 hours a week and still not afford RENT and have to live off food stamps.
If we want to save our taxes, we have to get min. wage to increase. Co.s won't suffer with a wage hike b/c they are already making huge profits off their employees!
I think Barbara did an excellent job of pointing out how hard and pretty much impossible to survive on min. wage. She is right, there has to be a change.
Read this book.






