Hand to Mouth: Living in Bootstrap America

Hand to Mouth: Living in Bootstrap America

by Linda Tirado
Hand to Mouth: Living in Bootstrap America

Hand to Mouth: Living in Bootstrap America

by Linda Tirado

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Overview

One of the Best 5 Books of 2014 — Esquire


"I’ve been waiting for this book for a long time. Well, not this book, because I never imagined that the book I was waiting for would be so devastatingly smart and funny, so consistently entertaining and unflinchingly on target. In fact, I would like to have written it myself – if, that is, I had lived Linda Tirado’s life and extracted all the hard lessons she has learned. I am the author of Nickel and Dimed, which tells the story of my own brief attempt, as a semi-undercover journalist, to survive on low-wage retail and service jobs. Tirado is the real thing."
—from the foreword by Barbara Ehrenreich, New York Times bestselling author of Nickel and Dimed


We in America have certain ideas of what it means to be poor. Linda Tirado, in her signature brutally honest yet personable voice, takes all of these preconceived notions and smashes them to bits. She articulates not only what it is to be working poor in America (yes, you can be poor and live in a house and have a job, even two), but what poverty is truly like—on all levels. 

Frankly and boldly, Tirado discusses openly how she went from lower-middle class, to sometimes middle class, to poor and everything in between, and in doing so reveals why “poor people don’t always behave the way middle-class America thinks they should.” 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780698175280
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 10/02/2014
Sold by: Penguin Group
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
Sales rank: 240,850
File size: 597 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Linda Tirado is a completely average American with two kids. She has worked as a general manager at a Burger King and until just recently worked as a night cook at Ihop and as a voting rights activist for a disability nonprofit. She also writes essays on poverty and class issues. She lives in Enoch, Utah, with her husband and children. This is her first book.

Table of Contents

Foreword Barbara Ehrenreich ix

Introduction xiii

1 It Takes Money to Make Money 1

2 You Get What You Pay For 13

3 You Can't Pay a Doctor in Chickens Anymore 31

4 I'm Not Angry So Much as I'm Really Tired 51

5 I've Got Way Bigger Problems Than a Spinach Salad Can Solve 79

6 This Part Is About Sex 93

7 We Do Not Have Babies for Welfare Money 103

8 Poverty Is Fucking Expensive 129

9 Being Poor Isn't a Crime-It Just Feels Like It 145

10 An Open Letter to Rich People 167

Afterword 187

Acknowledgments 193

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

I’d like people to know that we’re not stupid. Our decisions are not made, nor our lives, lived in a vacuum. It’s not like we’re choosing to eat utter crap instead of quinoa. It’s that we’ve just worked eighteen solid hours and we still need to clean the house and we’re due back at work in eight hours and cooking takes sleep time. It’s the dopamine thing again. You know in So I Married An Axe Murderer, when the dad talks about how The Colonel puts an addictive chemical in his chicken that makes you crave it fortnightly, smartass? That’s actually true. Humans can become addicted to the food of the poor. We aren’t dumb, we know this. We just don’t have the energy to fight it and real food is expensive and time-consuming. And we don’t have the luxury of vanity; we know it’ll make us fat, but why on earth would we care? Are we going to suddenly become less marginalized if we are a size 12 instead of 20? Is that a thing that keeps the rent paid? No? Then we don’t care. 
 

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