Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Friday, October 14, 2011

Just My Type

Knowing of my growing appreciation for all things font, my friend Alli told me about a new book that she thought I might like...and like I did! I ordered a copy post-haste.

It's titled Just My Type: A Book About Fonts and it was written by Simon Garfield, a British journalist. If you loved Eats, Shoots & Leaves or were a fan of the documentary Helvetica, you're in for a treat.

Here's a review from Amazon:

Simon Garfield’s Just My Type presents an entertaining history of fonts, from font "pirating" dating back nearly as far as Gutenberg to the creation of Comic Sans and Ikea’s font-change controversy. With a variety of recent, news-making examples and font samples throughout, Just My Type explains how and why certain fonts can elicit emotions or gut-instinct reactions. Garfield’s humor and historical anecdotes add to his deep understanding of how something as simple as font choice can speak volumes about our cultural climate--and why it’s so easy to agonize over what font to use on a party invitation. Whether you’re already a font aficionado or can’t tell the difference between Times New Roman and Arial, this entertaining history will give you a greater appreciation of the typefaces that surround you every day.
DROOL...order your copy today!

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Block Party: The Modern Quilting Bee

My quilting bee's book is hot off the press and available for ordering! Thanks to the top-notch Chicago postal service, I've finally received my books, only two months after I should have. I beg to differ with their supposed creed: "Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds."

Moving on. About a year and a half ago, my virtual quilting bee got a book deal and signed our lives away. I'm thrilled to be a contributor to the book.

September was my month and I asked my fellow quilters to do an "Uneven Coin Block." I chose a light brown background and provided an array of pastelly blues and greens for them to make the uneven coins. To me, they look like books in a library, piled high and waiting to be read.

As if having a published book about quilting wasn't enough, the one and only Denyse Schmidt, one of the truest queens of quilting and fabric design, wrote the foreword! Be still my heart!

Two of my favorites are Jaquie's "Dresden Plate Block" (July) and Elizabeth's "Wonky Stripe Block" (November). If you've ever attempted a Dresden plate, it'll really kick your butt to the curb. I can't even imagine doing an entire Dresden quilt on my own...but that's one of the joys of the quilting bee...you can learn new techniques and promptly move on if you don't care for the work involved with them!

You can order your copy of the book here!

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Contract

Just as buying a "real couch" makes me feel a little more grown up, so does signing a contract to be a contributor to a published book...a quilting book no less! My virtual quilting bee, Block Party, is being turned into a book that will be written by our fearless leaders Kristen and Alissa and published by C&T Publishing, a quilting and fiber arts company. As members of the bee, each of us have been given one of the twelve chapters in which our quilt will be featured.

More than a "how-to" manual, the book will also speak to the emergence of virtual quilting bees and the sense of community crafters have found online. Modern quilters unite!

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

No Knead

I have a healthy fear of bread baking. Until the other day I was intimidated by those who speak of their exploits with and knowledge of yeast. I listened jealously to their tales of focaccias and sourdoughs and was envious of the fresh bakery smells that were sure to be wafting around in their kitchens. I love crusty bread, but it's not exactly cheap, and with only two peeps in the house, it inevitably goes stale and uneaten after a few days.

After embracing and accepting my fears with the art of making bread however, I saw this book and had second thoughts about my perceived inabilities. It's pages promise low-maintenance bread baking opportunities that seemed both manageable and cheap. Just the ticket for this carb lover.

Viola! I've been baking bread over the last two weeks and each loaf tastes like the real thing - cause it is! No kneading, hardly any waiting... it's so simple. The best part is that you can use as much or as little dough as you want so that there is no wasted bread after a meal. I think I need to invest in a large purchase of flour. Soon.

Friday, October 31, 2008

Pippi Långstrump

Even though I didn't grow up wrapped in Swedish tradition, I did love Pippi Longstocking and spent more than one Halloween dressed up as one of my favorite "orphans." She had common-sense, amazing strength which allowed her to literally pick up anything, and lived parent-less with her horse and monkey. What else could a little girl want, right?

I think my mom did a great job getting my braids around a straightened hanger. She sewed me up a mismatched ragamuffin outfit inspired by my 8-year old vision of what an ideal Swedish orphan should look like. I even had painted freckles to enhance my own. Kids crack me up on Halloween...

Monday, July 28, 2008

Finding Faith, Losing Faith

My dear sister has had her first book (which she co-authored with Scot McKnight) published! This is just another notch on my long pride list I have regarding her many accomplishments and capabilities.

Hauna worked very hard compiling the first-hand accounts and interviews that fill her section of this wonderful book, as well as researching and developing a conversion theory/pattern. I had the good fortune of living with her this summer and fall while she burned the midnight oil writing, editing, and rewriting until everything was just right.

It is a compelling look at the why and how of those who are faithful turning from what they had once believed or practiced and walking instead toward something new, whether that be Evangelicalism, Catholicism, Judaism, or Atheism. It is written in approachable and understandable language, avoiding religious jargon or anything too high-brow. I recommend that you order your copy today!

Learn more about Finding Faith, Losing Faith: Stories of Conversion and Apostasy and support my sister who will one day be a most renowned writer and theologian. Someday I'm sure the academy will claim her as their own, but for now I know that she's mine!

Friday, May 30, 2008

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Starshaped Press

Over the weekend my History of the Book class met at the Starshaped Press, a print shop that uses movable type, platen presses from the 1920s, and engraved plates. It was amazing to see the things we'd been talking about in class come to life! Jen, the owner of the shop, studied book and paper arts through classes and through an apprenticeship and now runs her own press where she makes posters, cards, CD covers, etc. - all on old-fashioned presses.

This is all very different than other modern day letterpresses such as the Paper Source or other modern (albeit wonderful) printing companies. On her website, Jen writes, "There's an inherent beauty and imperfection to the form of each and every letter that cannot be replicated on the computer or in a polymer or magnesium plate." She has one Vandercook proof press (which we were able to use and make the print pictured above) and two Chandler and Price platen presses.

Seeing her different typefaces, movable type (some 100 years old), and woodcuts was an inspiration! We were able do a print of our own for a souvenir through cranking the paper through the printer over the inked metal type that was pre-set for us. Now that I am almost done with school, I might have to indulge myself in some extra-curricular activities next fall in printmaking.

Here are some videos of these classic presses in action!
Platen Press working (0:19)
Platen Press inking (0:12)
Letterpress Documentary (5:52)

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Book Blog

My friend and co-worker Jen just started a new book blog! Jen is an avid reader, devouring what seems like at least one or two books a week. She always has a book in her hands and is continually on the lookout for new books to read.

I know I will be a devout reader of her blog, and I hope you will be too! Check her out at http://devourerofbooks.wordpress.com/ and enjoy her insights and recommendations!

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

1586 Reference

For my History of the Book class, we have the privilege of learning about and handling rare books from the 15th to 19th centuries. Our class meets at the Chicago Botanic Garden's Library once a month over a weekend. They have a rare book collection with about 3,000 books from this time after the printing press was created. My group studied and wrote about the book below which was an herbal reference book printed in 1586 in Frankfurt, Germany for physicians to use and prescribe remedies to their patients. There is even handwriting in the back by one of the book's previous owners. Be still my heart!

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Winter Reading

Over my winter break I was able to do some pleasure reading...a rare delicacy these days it seems! Each book was recommended to me by a different reader, so I will now recommend them to you.

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, by Mark Haddon
When the topic of literature concerning children with special needs arose, Hauna told me about this little gem. Told from the perspective of a fifteen-year-old autistic boy, this novel is about Christopher's attempts to solve a mystery that concerns his neighbor's dog, his separated parents, and his very literal-minded self. Insights the reader gleans from Christopher's autism and his mathematical point-of-view are endearing and revealing. If you're looking for something original and eye-opening, you ought to try this British bestseller.

Frankenstein, by Mary Shelly
Frankenstein was recommended during a booktalk on Gothic literature last semester in my Reader's Advisory class. I had heard from several people that it was a captivating and beautiful book, so I thought I would give it a whirl. Even if you think you know what this book is about, I would highly recommend reading it for yourself. Mary Shelly wrote it when she was only 19, but the language, passion, and pure human emotion are gripping! Find out who the real monster is in this classic "horror" novel.

The Catcher in the Rye, by J.D. Salinger
This is a book I've always been meaning to read but never got around to actually reading it. What was I thinking!? Similar to the Dog in the Night-time above, it covers a few days narrated by a teenager. This teenager, however, is much different. Filled with wry observations and an honest, yet pessimistic outlook, this coming-of-age novel follows the lonely life of a wealthy but awkward seventeen-year-old just kicked out of prep school as he encounters "phonies," teachers, girls, and other city dwellers. The Catcher in the Rye strikes me as a book one would read over and over throughout the years and never tire of it.

Next up...Beowulf!

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Bookshelves!

For our birthday this year, TK and I decided to make some bookshelves for the office in his house. I love to buy books and need a place for them. TK loves woodworking and building furniture...thus our task was clear. It's amazing to me what he can do with some oak plywood and a table saw. The man has mad skillz!

They've been finished for a while, but due to the busy fall, I've been slow on the blog. Now that the shelves are complete I can organize all my books....and maybe buy some more to fill the empty spaces.












Every time I enter the office, I'm proud of my builder. For more pictures from start to finish, click here!

Thursday, December 13, 2007

The Daring Book for Girls

In the beginning of this past summer I wrote about a great new book I had found called The Dangerous Book for Boys, and was wishing there was one of equal interest that little girls might also enjoy. Look now further because it has been published! The Daring Book for Girls brings the excitement and hands-on fun that the Boys book had, but with some added refineries and girl-focused chapters.

This is a modern day reference book for girls filled with information on so many delicious topics, I wish I had it while growing up. Its practical pages show girls how to do everything from paddling a canoe and making a toolbox to pressing flowers and playing hopscotch.

Some of my favorite chapters so far include Queens of the Ancient World, Putting Your Hair Up With a Pencil, French Terms of Endearment, Women Spies, Boys, How to Negotiate a Salary, and Books That Will Change Your Life.

Written in a similar style as the Iggulden's book, the words are nostalgic and the pictures are reminiscent of a less electronic age. The book is also intentional in its global entries and includes chapters on different languages and cultures that they encourage girls to learn more about. While it presents opportunities and ideas that girls might not have considered for themselves before, it does not go overboard in any extreme feminist agenda that would look down on or disrespect males in general. There is plenty of nail-painting, sleep-over, and beauty advice.

My only warning to those thinking of purchasing the book is that there seem to be a few more references to the occult in its pages when compared to the Dangerous Book for Boys. Like it or not, palm reading, playing Bloody Mary and Light as a Feather Stiff as a Board are things that girls just do at sleepovers. However, some parents may not want to promote these types of things as equally as they'd like to encourage other great feats of daring and adventure presented in the book.

Overall though, it is a fun read and I think it would be a great resource for any girl - or boy for that matter!

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Holidays on Ice

In my Readers Advisory class we've been required to annotate and book talk several titles over the semester, and last night's class focused on graphic novels, bestsellers, and audio books. I presented Holidays on Ice, one of my favorite things to read every Christmas. It is available as an audio book and nothing beats David Sedaris reading any thing at all!

This book is a hilarious compilation of six short stories that all take place during the holidays. Retelling the misadventures of his dysfunctional family, his full-time job as an elf at Macy’s department store, and other strange situations, Sedaris presents an entertaining and comedic look at the hustle and bustle of the holiday season. Because the audio-recording was narrated by the author (who is a qualified performer), one can only assume it is in exactly the tone and style that was intended when it was written. While not every author should or could narrate their own work, this one can. Sedaris’ dry reading of the text alludes to the boredom and mundaneness of his life in a side-splitting fashion.

Whether you read this book or listen to it, it matters not. One of my favorite parts is "The Santaland Diaries," where the author recounts his days as an elf (named Crumpet) at Macy's department store in New York City. I highly recommend this sardonic, irreverent, non-heartwarming, holiday memoir.

This makes a perfect Christmas gift for almost anyone on your list! Check it out through the following links - Buy it! Borrow it! Listen to excerpt! (click on "Santaland Diaries")

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Weather Book Talk

Once again, each of us had to do a presentation in my Library Materials for Children class...this time it was a "book talk" on any topic to any young audience of readers (or their parents). I chose to do weather related books and tried to focus my selections to appeal to children who live in an urban setting, seeing that most took place in the city. I broke the 15 books down into 4 sections: heat, rain, snow, and extreme weather. Here are some of the highlights of my favorites from the list and a short annotation after each.

Hot Day on Abbott Avenue, written by Karen English, illustrated by Javaka Steptoe, Clarion Books, 2004 - Kishi and Renée’s tempers flare at each other, as each refuses to play on the hottest day of the summer. They soon make up as they find fun ways to pass the day and overcome the heat. Buy it! Borrow it! Learn more!



Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain, retold by Verna Aardema, illustrated by Beatriz Vidal, Dial Press, 1981 - Travel to Africa’s Kapiti Plain as Ki-pat, a Maasai herdsman, wishes for the rains to come to his dry land. Listen and watch as rain quenches the earth in this lyrical poem connecting humans, animals, and the land. Buy it! Borrow it! Learn more!

Come on, Rain!, written by Karen Hesse, illustrated by Jon J. Muth, Scholastic Press, 1999 - In this book, Tessie waits for the coming rainstorm with her three friends and observes how the wind and rain bring long-awaited changes to the city. Buy it! Borrow it! Learn more!


The Snowy Day, written and illustrated by Ezra Jack Keats, Viking Press, 1962 - This is a story about a little boy named Peter and his fun-filled day out in the snow. Follow Peter as he discovers new things to do outside. Buy it! Borrow it! Learn more!


Monsoon, written by Uma Krishnaswami, illustrated by Jamel Akib, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003 -This book is a peek into the lives of a northern Indian community awaiting heavy rains to end their dry season. Hope, fear, and relief are all bundled together in this exciting look at another culture and their extreme weather. Buy it! Borrow it! Learn more!

Monday, November 19, 2007

The Invisible Sex | Summer Reading 5

Several months ago I finished The Invisible Sex: Uncovering the True Role of Women in Prehistory by J.M. Adovasio, Jake Page, and Olga Soffer, one of the books in my self-assigned, still-being-posted-about 2007 Summer Reading Program. I've been interested in archaeology and prehistory since I was a little girl. A few years ago I volunteered as part of an excavation in Mexico through UCLA and learned a lot about finding and studying artifacts of the past. While that hardly qualifies me to have too many opinions on the subject, when I heard about this book I was very intrigued.

The authors argue that prehistoric women were "pivotal in a wide range of culture-building endeavors, including the invention of language, the origins of agriculture and the conceptualization of boat building." Essentially, the book tries to deconstruct popular opinions regarding the evolutionary impact of different genders on the final product of the human race... ideas which have been assumed by archaeologists and laymen alike with little scientific verification. It is true that many who study the past have presented images of muscle-bound early man, singlehandedly warding off mammoths and sitting around chipping spear heads in his spare time. While the best known hominid "Lucy" is indeed female, museum dioramas, textbook pictures, and popular movies and literature often show examples of cavemen.

Stone is more durable than woven fabric, food, baskets, and other soft goods. Traditional tools and resources of prehistoric females decompose and are therefore harder for archaeologists to acquire, let alone analyze. While prehistoric artifacts in the way of textiles are few and far between, the authors do make a point of insisting that the preserved evidence that does exist can not necessarily be associated with prehistoric males. They also note that the large masses of mammoth bones found throughout eastern Europe and the United States indicate that they seem to have died naturally, rather than being brought to extinction by human hunters. They argue that if ancient humans killed mammoths, it was a rare occurrence that would have involved all abled members of a community - men, women, and children. Rather, excavations suggest that people mostly lived on smaller rabbit-sized mammals occasionally, and foraged vegetation most often.

Now, I know I am not an expert by any means, but the authors (2 males, 1 female) though highly credentialed seem to present some pretty sweeping conclusions and new assumptions based on their strong reaction against the biases of what has for so long been a male dominated field. Of the book, one reviewer wrote, "The trail of inference that leads from fossil fragments to conclusions about sex, gender and social structure has more in common with the Da Vinci code than with scientific method."

I think that the authors are right in their assertion that because males have dominated the study of prehistory for so long, that those scholars will come at it from a male-centric perspective. While biases need to be limited, however, I don't think that female historians, on the other hand, approach any given subject through a purely asexual lens. I'm not saying I think it's right, I'm just saying I think it's true.

I don't know if the "discovery" that women were instrumental in the creation of culture, society, and language, should be all that ground-breaking. One would think that both male and female had something to do with getting us to our modern state of civilization and development. Plus, keeping humankind alive through food and cloth production, encouraging the necessity of language/family dependence, and promoting the use of other technological innovations isn't exactly an insult to the female sex. Regardless of the snide feminist comments sprinkled throughout and a few sweeping inferences that hindered some of the book's credibility, it worth reading, if only for further exposure to the subject.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

In Spite of the Gods: The Strange Rise of Modern India

This fall in my Readers Advisory class we have to write annotations on several books that we choose to read over the course of the semester. My favorite book so far that I've read skimmed through has been In Spite of the Gods: The Strange Rise of Modern India, which is an intriguing look into the history and rise of the world's largest democracy. When the Economist endorses a book, I go for it.

In Spite of the Gods was written by Edward Luce, a Washington Bureau Chief for the Financial Times who has stationed in New Delhi from 2000 to 2005. The author has an obvious passion for India, as he presents its many triumphs and beauties while not neglecting its failures and shortcomings. His study encompasses modern India’s politics, religion, and culture all of which have so influenced the country’s economic, technological, and academic growth. With staggering facts presented on every page regarding India’s IT boom, political corruption, massive poverty, and enormous population, Luce shows his readers a modern emerging India that is in position to rival China and the United States as a global player. This book dramatically takes into account the forces which have been shaping India as it negotiates between traditions of the past and its high-speed race toward modernity and innovation. Some things I learned from this book are that...

  • India is the fourth largest economy in the world
  • By 2034, India will have 1.6 billion people (the world population is a little over 6.6 billion)
  • India’s middle class is already larger than the entire population of the United States
  • 1 of 3 of the world’s malnourished children live in India
  • Only 65% of Indians are literate, compared to China’s 90%
  • While 400 million people are employed in India, only 35 million pay taxes.
  • 75% of the country lives in poverty
  • In 1991 Indians purchased 150,000 automobiles, and in 2008 they are expected to purchase 1,000,000
  • By 2008 3.5 million white-collar jobs are expected to be offshored to India
  • 29% of Indians fluently speak English (350 million people) - The entire US population is just over 300 million
This is serious stuff my friends.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Children's Author Illustrator | Lois Ehlert

In my Library Materials for Children class this fall, each of us has to do a presentation on an author/illustrator of children's material. I was assigned Lois Ehlert and, if you'll be so kind as to indulge me, I will share some of the marvelous art (and writing) I encountered through her books.

She illustrates through the medium of collage, arranging brightly painted paper in the way that best fits her taste. Many of the themes in Lois Ehlert’s books come from her own interests, and seek to connect her young readers with the natural world. She doesn't just write a book about a cat trying to catch some birds for a good meal in Feathers for Lunch - she meticulously collages 12 different birds, presenting them in their true-to-life size and concluding with an appendix of useful identification information for each bird and plant seen throughout the book.

In Waiting for Wings - my favorite of her picture books - she shows the process of various caterpillars, who inhabit the smaller inset pages of the book, eventually becoming butterflies who branch out into a larger context. Again, the last few pages of the book provide colorful and informative identification facts about the book’s butterflies and flowers, and some adivice on how to create your own garden that will attract buterflies from the neigborhood. Other books illustrated in this style of painted paper collage include Planting a Rainbow; Eating the Alphabet: Fruits and Vegetables from A to Z; Red Leaf, Yellow Leaf; Nuts to You!; Top Cat; and Leaf Man.

In Eating the Alphabet: Fruits and Vegetables from A to Z, the pages are full of beautiful food from around the world. The appendix also includes useful information on the fruits and vegetables featured in the book as well as their common uses and origins. Growing Vegetable Soup, is a more simple book geared toward early learners and their caregivers. With bold graphic art, Ehlert presents the many steps in preparing, planting, and growing a vegetable garden in order to make some homemade soup. Other books of Eherlt's with a more graphic art style are Color Zoo, Color Farm, Fish Eyes, Circus, Moon Rope, and more!

Thursday, August 16, 2007

East of Eden | Summer Reading 4

As I previously mentioned in my original Summer Reading post, I am not much of a fiction reader. For some reason I've always preferred to "learn more" through non-fiction... books that are "about something." But when I think back to the fictional literature I have read, those are the books that have stuck with me, their characters and enduring themes timelessly engraved in my mind. The fraternity and forgiveness found in the pages of A Tale of Two Cities, the human vs. animal instinct in Lord of the Flies, the suffering and madness of The Crucible... these books can change you. I have begun to realize that you most certainly can learn things from literature, and, after all, I suppose the point of reading is not necessarily to learn something, but to also take from it pleasure and enjoyment. Reading East of Eden has begun in me what I hope will be a new-found love of classical literature. I think John Steinbeck is a genius and I will be reading much more from him in the future.

East of Eden is a grand morality play that follows two sets of brothers and two families before, during, and after the turn of the century. This novel captures the people, land, and spirit of 19th/20th Century America... "The Great American Novel," if you will. Its epic themes of good versus evil and love versus hatred are interwoven beautifully and intricately throughout the story.

I felt myself almost wanting to prolong my finishing of the book, wishing I could continue with the privilege of peering into the lives of the novel's characters. Among the most complicated was the naïve Adam Trask, always miserably struggling between the good his friends Samuel and Lee radiate and the evil he could not deny that emanated from his "wife" Cathy, repeating his own saga in the life of his twin sons Aron and Caleb. Cathy Ames/Kate, a cold-hearted whore turned madam, must be one of the most deplorable characters in the history of literature! Devoid of anything recognizably human, this evil broad kills her parents as a child, sleeps with her brother-in-law on her wedding night, shoots her husband and abandons her infant twin sons... and this is all before she does some really evil deeds.

The guilt and betrayal that haunt the young and discouraged Cal Trask as he tries to understand himself and life alongside his (seemingly perfect) twin brother Aron are at times more than the reader can bare on his behalf. Samuel Hamilton and the Trask's servant Lee are pillars of wisdom, goodness, and humility throughout the epoch, and the landscape of the Salinas Valley in California is a character in itself.

Throughout the novel each set of brothers (Adam and Charles | Aron and Cal) tries to win the love of their father by different means, and a story of why one brother is successful while the other feels unloved is revealed through a soaring mountain of symbolism, allegory, and metaphor. Ultimately, in its final dramatic moments of pain and redemption, it is a story about what we become verses what we may become.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Nickel and Dimed | Summer Reading 3

I am interested in matters relating to poverty and economics, so I was drawn to this book because I thought it might provide some insight into America’s working poor. However I was disappointed to find that the book mainly presented Ms. Ehrenreich’s prejudices, insecurities, and harsh judgments about people. After looking more deeply into the available literature, I would have chosen to read The Working Poor: Invisible in America or One Nation, Underprivileged: Why American Poverty Affects Us All ...something more substantial.

In this book, Barbara Ehrenreich decides to pose undercover as a low-wage worker across the country in an attempt to prove the groundbreaking idea that at minimum wage, the working poor cannot "get by" in the United States and that the welfare system is in need of reform. She takes on jobs as a waitress, maid, and Wal-mart associate in order to present what life is like on the other side of the poverty gap in America.

The author seems to have previously lived her life somehow protected from reality and shielded by a form of upper-class cluelessness. The book almost brings to mind a literary version of The Simple Life, where Ehrenreich comes off as a more highly educated, but just as desperate, Paris and Nicole. She doesn't want a roommate? She'll just use her back-up funds. She gets a skin-rash from cleaning supplies? She'll just contact her personal dermatologist. She has to clean a toilet while she is a maid? She'll complain about it to no end and suggest those who do their jobs without pitying themselves are less human than she is.

In her attempt to report on the struggles of the working poor who barely scrape by on minimum wage jobs, the author showed little compassion for the people with whom she worked and into whose lives she never integrated herself. I’d suggest that she even comes across as looking down on them and not valuing their lives as equal to her own. A certain smugness is ever-present regarding her education and “better” way of life. For me, the constant hope that people would notice that she was different got old fast.

I believe that her failure to integrate herself into the lives of her coworkers was also debilitating to her research. By not engaging in the same social interactions as her coworkers, I think that she didn't get a holistic picture on what it would mean to get by in America. The lack of friends and family merely serves to point out what an impossibility it is for anyone to get by without a social network, something that all of her coworkers seemed to have had. One of her main problems – the cost of rent – would have been easily alleviated had she accepted housing offers others presented to her. The occasional comments from co-workers that Ehrenreich shares in the book suggest that they are not alone, as she is. Many live with family, or have spouses or boyfriends who work. None of them seem to be particularly dissatisfied with their lives, nor do they resent their employers. Actually, most of them seem proud to be working, proud of their work, and proud of the companies for which they work...the same work for which the author has such contempt.

The book is also oddly offensive to those she is often trying to “help.” Throughout the book she makes offensive statements about most ethnic minorities as well as rude generalizations and assumptions about those who are overweight and don't look like her. Her insensitive assessment of Wal-Mart employees needing only the abilities of a ‘deaf-mute’ or someone with autism was at best demeaning. In her attempt to promote social justice, she often comes across as patronizing and condescending toward those for whom she claims to fight.

Constantly complaining about manual labor being physically hard, her clothes smelling like the restaurants in which she works, and her lack of fancy food and a nice drink every evening, the reader becomes less and less sympathetic to this self-centered writer who most likely had never previously spent much time outside of her privileged lifestyle. Instead of her endless whining about her own discomfort, it would have been nice if Ehrenreich spent more time talking about social impacts of poverty and relaying the experiences of her coworkers who are truly poor.

In this book the reader finds out much about Barbara Ehrenreich but fairly little about the difficult lives of people she worked with, and nearly nothing about what she would suggest the community do to make the lives of the working poor easier.