![]() ![]() In a starred review at the time, a Kirkus critic wrote, “Sharp, empathetic, astute, Ehrenreich speaks loudly and eloquently for a group of workers who are often too tired and too manipulated to speak for themselves.” The book became a popular bestseller and is now considered a classic of social justice reporting. To research it, Ehrenreich took a series of jobs-as a waitress, housecleaner, and Wal-Mart employee, among others-to better understand the challenges faced by the working poor in maintaining housing, health care, and child care. The book investigated how low-wage workers struggled to survive during the 1990s, commonly perceived as years of economic growth and prosperity in the United States. ![]() Barbara Ehrenreich, the journalist and author whose books sympathetically explored the lives of working-class Americans while challenging the systems that exploited them, has died at the age of 81, the New York Times reports.Įhrenreich was best known for her nonfiction book, Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, published in 2001. ![]()
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