Featured Books

Nickel and Dimed

by Barbara Ehrenreich

Publisher: Picador Published: 2011-08-02 Category: Personal Empowerment

Imagine stripping away your college degree, your professional network, your savings account, and your middle-class safety net. Now imagine trying to survive on six or seven dollars an hour, working jobs that leave your body aching and your spirit depleted. This groundbreaking work of immersive journalism takes readers on an eye-opening journey into the world of America's working poor, revealing truths about economic inequality that statistics alone cannot convey.

Through firsthand experience working as a waitress, hotel maid, house cleaner, nursing home aide, and Walmart employee, this exploration dismantles comfortable assumptions about poverty and hard work in America. The investigation spans three different cities, each presenting unique challenges and revealing similar patterns of exploitation, indignity, and the mathematics of impossibility that define low-wage work. What emerges is a powerful testament to both the resilience of workers trapped in economic precarity and the structural forces that keep them there.

Readers will discover the hidden costs of being poor in America. Far from being cheaper, poverty often costs more. Without money for a rental deposit, workers pay inflated weekly rates at residential motels. Without a permanent address, basic necessities like opening a bank account become complicated. Without money for bulk purchases at discount stores, the poor pay more per unit for everything from toilet paper to food. Without reliable transportation, getting to multiple part-time jobs becomes an expensive logistical nightmare. These insights shatter the myth that poverty stems simply from poor choices rather than constrained options.

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