Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a good book. But her name is not a household name.
Probably depends on your age and education or media consumption. For Gen Xers who were in college in the 90s, she was very well known. Anyone who listened to NPR in the 90s would have known her work, I think.
I’m a Gen Xer and went to college beginning in ‘96. Never heard of her.
Anonymous wrote:Her critique of the pink ribbon culture after going through breast cancer was thought provoking. If I recall correctly she also decided after 70 she'd had enough of being poked and prodded by doctors having reached a good enough age. Great writer.
Anonymous wrote:I LOVED her book Nickeled and Dimed and was so sad to hear of her passing.
If anyone wants to read similarly themed books:
Evicted by Matthew Desmond (fantastic book about the struggle for affordable housing)
Maid is a good one
Robert Reich’s books and Twitter
Elizabeth Warren’s The Two Income Trap
Even Educated and The Glass Castle have similar themes about the real life struggles of the working poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a good book. But her name is not a household name.
Probably depends on your age and education or media consumption. For Gen Xers who were in college in the 90s, she was very well known. Anyone who listened to NPR in the 90s would have known her work, I think.
I’m a Gen Xer and went to college beginning in ‘96. Never heard of her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That was a good book. But her name is not a household name.
Probably depends on your age and education or media consumption. For Gen Xers who were in college in the 90s, she was very well known. Anyone who listened to NPR in the 90s would have known her work, I think.
Anonymous wrote:"Nickel and Dimed" was an important account of an often hidden problem. She did us all a service with that book. Maybe someone now needs to take up that mantle and do an updated version, because I suspect many of those indignities suffered by low-wage workers years ago are sadly still with us. Maybe even in more insidious forms.