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Hand to Mouth: Living in Bootstrap America Hardcover – 2 Oct 2014

4.4 out of 5 stars 34 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 195 pages
  • Publisher: Putnam Adult (2 Oct. 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0399171983
  • ISBN-13: 978-0399171987
  • Product Dimensions: 15.9 x 2.2 x 23.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,055,636 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

"She is refreshingly infuriated. She acknowledges her faults, but she hones a constructive resentment to cut through her chronic depression, sharpen her wit and tune her X-ray vision into the disparities of power and money. She maps the chain reactions that lead families from one setback to another."--"The New York Times"
"A terrific writer...A most honest book. Everyone who thinks things are just fine in this country should read it."--Matt Taibbi, "New York Times" bestselling author of "The Divide"
"You won't soon forget her voice or her message."--"Entertainment Weekly"
"Enthralling and horrifying, this should be required reading for policymakers."--"Booklist" (starred review)
"[An] unapologetic explanation for why she and other poor people do what they do. It's funny, sarcastic...and most of all outrageously honest."--"Bloomberg Businessweek"

"The woman who accidentally explained poverty to the nation." The Huffington Post
[A] whipsmart woman s firsthand account of what it looks and smells and tastes and feels like to be living in poverty brilliant and to the point. You won t soon forget her voice or her message. Entertainment Weekly
Funny, sarcastic, full of expletives, and most of all outrageously honest. . . . Tirado has a way with words that s somehow both breezy and blunt. BusinessWeek
In this riveting memoir, Tirado shares in vivid detail what it's like to be a college graduate in the throes of poverty. Women s Health Magazine
"Must-read...powerful." Good Housekeeping
Educative . . . Tirado s raw reportage offers solidarity for those on the front lines of hardship yet issues a cautionary forewarning to the critical: Poverty is a potential outcome for all of us. Outspoken and vindictive, Tirado embodies the cyclical vortex of today s struggle to survive. Kirkus Reviews
Tirado tells it like it is Enthralling and horrifying, this should be required reading for policymakers. Booklist, starred review
In Hand to Mouth, [Tirado] uses her piercing insight, coupled with a confessional but unrepentant voice, to open a nuanced and deeply unsettling window into poverty in the U.S. Ms. Magazine
This book should inspire important discussion. Library Journal
The great thing about writing is that it doesn t discriminate, with regard to race or gender or anything, class included. Being rich and advantaged doesn t mean you won t be cruelly exposed on paper as a pompous fraud. Conversely, if you write well, being broke and tired won t prevent your talent and mental clarity from shining through. Linda Tirado is just a terrific writer. There s a crucial passage in Hand to Mouth where Linda asks why we all can t at least just agree that someone has to do the grunt work, and that there s dignity in that, too. With this strong and unembarrassed account of her life on the edges of poverty Linda single-handedly re-takes some of the dignity that has been stripped from people without means in this singularly greed-dominated, most mean-spirited generation in America s history. Honesty has its own power and this is a most honest book. Everyone who thinks things are just fine in this country should read it. Matt Taibbi, New York Times bestselling author


"Linda Tirado tells it like it is for tens of millions of America's low-wage workers a group that's growing even as America's billionaires rake in ever more of the nation's total income and wealth. The top hedge-fund partner got $3.5 billion in 2013. That came to $1,750,000 an hour. Yet somehow we can't even raise the minimum wage. Read what Linda has to say and you'll understand it's not because Linda or other low-wage workers somehow deserve to be treated this way any more than the $3.5 billion hedge-fund deserves his pay. The game is rigged and we must un-rig it." Robert B. Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor, national bestselling author of Aftershock
When our economy and our democracy are both broken, the story Linda Tirado writes here is simply known as real life for millions of Americans who are going broke every day and feel ignored by our government. Every American deserves an equal seat at the table in the halls of power and a wage that can put food on the dinner table.Hand to Mouth should serve as a red flag to the politicians in Washington and the millionaires on Wall Street, this is why we the people are mad as hell, and we re not going to take it anymore. Cenk Uygur, Host of The Young Turks (www.tytnetwork.com)

For those who have never had the experience, Tirado s book allows you to hear, smell, taste, feel and visualize life as a minimum wage worker. It also leaves you with two inescapable conclusions. First, poverty can happen to anyone even if you are born into the middle class. Second, you can educate people until you are blue in the face, but as long as there are jobs that require sweeping floors, flipping burgers, or waiting tables, we will never eliminate poverty until everyone who works is paid a living wage. Robert Creamer, Democracy Partners, author of Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win

Hand to Mouth delivers the message to America s poorest citizens, You are not alone, and it represents a wake-up call to the world s wealthiest individuals that income inequality has dangerous economic consequences for real people. It is an insightful, heart-wrenching, and at times laugh-out-loud look into how a third of our fellow Americans are living as poor people in an economy that only serves the top 1%. If you can afford to purchase this book, you will be peering into a world you likely have never known and definitely will never forget. Tirado s words read like a conversation over coffee, but she delivers a devastating blow to our current economic assumptions equivalent to a modern day Oliver Twist or The Jungle. Ryan Clayton, Executive Director, Wolf-PAC.com

"She is refreshingly infuriated. She acknowledges her faults, but she hones a constructive resentment to cut through her chronic depression, sharpen her wit and tune her X-ray vision into the disparities of power and money. She maps the chain reactions that lead families from one setback to another."--The New York Times
A terrific writer...A most honest book. Everyone who thinks things are just fine in this country should read it. Matt Taibbi, New York Times bestselling author of The Divide
You won t soon forget her voice or her message. Entertainment Weekly
Enthralling and horrifying, this should be required reading for policymakers. Booklist (starred review)
[An] unapologetic explanation for why she and other poor people do what they do. It s funny, sarcastic...and most of all outrageously honest. Bloomberg Businessweek" --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Book Description

An urgent, uncompromising and heartfelt insider's account of what it is like to be poor and working-class in the modern West --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
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I read a newspaper review of this which described the author as 'very angry' and implied it was a worthwhile but tiring read. Linda Tirado is often very angry, and some of it comes out in this book, but anyone reading it can understand why. She explains articulately (the swearing is superfluous, but it's her voice, and as she's keen to point out, these are her personal experiences; she is not a mouthpiece for generic poverty) how she slipped from a relatively comfortable childhood and a start at college to an endless succession of service jobs punctuated by periods of unemployment and accompanied by moves from one temporary home to another. It will resonate with anyone who has been or is in a similar situation, and illustrates vividly just how easy it is to lose your foothold on getting along ok so that you are struggling for survival.

Tirado refutes, with some success, the accusations often thrown at those in poverty, for example issues around smoking, dirt, procreation and laziness. She doesn't paint herself or her colleagues and friends as saints, but speaks plain common sense, and cautions against lumping any mass of people together because of one similarity such as lack of money. She also refers to recent scientific studies which are further explored in books like 'Scarcity': we'd all be terrible with money if we didn't have any, because our brains focus on short-term survival.

It wasn't news to me, but reading her example it struck me again just how many ways things work against you when you have nothing, and how much harder it is to catch up to 'prosperous' from a standing start.
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A must read for anyone interested in what it really means to be working and poor in a developed country, in this case the wealthiest country in the world. Tirado brings to life what it means to be an invisible service industry worker in America in the 21st century.

This book covers the author’s first-hand experiences in a similar vein to the classic minimum wage books by the US journalist Barbara Ehrenreich (Nickel and Dimed) and the UK journalist Fran Adams (Below the Breadline).
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I found this book oddly comforting to read. If you've ever been poor, you will relate to everything she has to say about the experience. The book is easy to read and flows very nicely. What I found refreshing is she does not see poor people as a problem which needs to be fixed, rather she presents the idea that poor people and rich people need each other and exist in a state of interdependence. So much more insightful than a lot of theoretical books about class and social injustice. The authenticity gives this book meaning. Linda Tirado has lived what she is writing about and the book comes alive as a result.
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Format: Paperback
This is a hugely important, spirited, sharp, insightful, authentic book. It is about being a working poor person in a wealthy country-the wealthiest country in the world as it happens). It is unique because it is so well written and it is written by someone who is poor (rather than by a middle class journalist, valid and important though such works by Barbara Erenreich andf Polly Toynbee have been). This book hurts to read. It describes such cruelty perpetrated against the working poor by state systems and big company bosses who employ them on long hours under terrible conditions and on poverty wages, offering no protection with the law in favour of the boss class, allowing firing at will. No it is not a book about the 19th century but about now. Linda Tirado made me laugh out loud in places when I was not feeling angry and scared for her. This is raw truth at its articulate best.about how the working poor are treated. The humanity she exudes is extraordinary, It is heartening to read, what I have often observed, that most poor people are hugely generous with each other. They would literally give you their last dime. The USA arrests poor people for small infringements of the law, infringements usually caused by the juggling poor people have to do between say buying food and paying rent on time or paying that month's car registration fee for a ropey old motor and buying antibiotics for a sick infant. Yet not one wealthy banker who caused the crash and threw millions into yet more poverty, has been jailed. The UK experience of being poor, is different in only one respect -the fact that we currently have an NHS ( albeit that it is being sold piecemeal to American privateers).Read more ›
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This book is the result of Linda Tirado having coming to the end of a long shift as a service worker and blogging about the realities of being poor.Its a stirring polemic and one everyone here in UK should read as a dire warning as we move insistently towards a zero contract hours culture.She writes well when savaging those who always have an answer ready based on ignorance.She adds up hours spent walking to jobs and succinctly explains the dilemmas around whether to bother to look presentable for a job interview or not. It will mean more outlay and nothing extra in real terms. I enjoyed the book and would have given it 5 stars but for the steady cursing,which she warns us about, which after a while becomes sterile. I look forward to hearing more of her as I saw a photograph in the papares of her with Barack Obama.She deserves some nice stuff now. Read it and you will see what I mean
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