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The Working Poor: Invisible in America Hardcover – Deckle Edge, February 3, 2004
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From the author of the Pulitzer Prize–winning Arab and Jew, a new book that presents a searing, intimate portrait of working American families struggling against insurmountable odds to escape poverty.
As David K. Shipler makes clear in this powerful, humane study, the invisible poor are engaged in the activity most respected in American ideology—hard, honest work. But their version of the American Dream is a nightmare: low-paying, dead-end jobs; the profound failure of government to improve upon decaying housing, health care, and education; the failure of families to break the patterns of child abuse and substance abuse. Shipler exposes the interlocking problems by taking us into the sorrowful, infuriating, courageous lives of the poor—white and black, Asian and Latino, citizens and immigrants. We encounter them every day, for they do jobs essential to the American economy.
We meet drifting farmworkers in North Carolina, exploited garment workers in New Hampshire, illegal immigrants trapped in the steaming kitchens of Los Angeles restaurants, addicts who struggle into productive work from the cruel streets of the nation’s capital—each life another aspect of a confounding, far-reaching urgent national crisis. And unlike most works on poverty, this one delves into the calculations of some employers as well—their razor-thin profits, their anxieties about competition from abroad, their frustrations in finding qualified workers.
This impassioned book not only dissects the problems, but makes pointed, informed recommendations for change. It is a book that stands to make a difference.
- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherKnopf
- Publication dateFebruary 3, 2004
- Dimensions6.6 x 1.15 x 9.6 inches
- ISBN-100375408908
- ISBN-13978-0375408908
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
"As a culture, the United States is not quite sure about the causes of poverty, and is therefore uncertain about the solutions," he writes. Though he details many ways in which current assistance programs could be more effective and rational, he does not believe that government alone, nor any other single variable, can solve the problem. Instead, a combination of things are required, beginning with the political will needed to create a relief system "that recognizes both the society's obligation through government and business, and the individual's obligation through labor and family." He does propose some specific steps in the right direction such as altering the current wage structure, creating more vocational programs (in both the public and private sectors), developing a fairer way to distribute school funding, and implementing basic national health care.
Prepare to have any preconceived notions about those living in poverty in America challenged by this affecting book. --Shawn Carkonen
From Bookmarks Magazine
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
—New York Times Book Review
“The Working Poor...should be required reading not just for every menber of Conbress, but for every eligible voter.”
—Washington Post Book World
"The Working Pooris a powerful exposé that builds from page to page, from one grim revelation to another, until you have no choice but to leap out of your armchair and strike a blow for economic justice."
—Barbara Ehrenreich, author, Nickel and Dimed
"Through a combination of hard facts and moving accounts of hardships endured by individuals, David Shipler's new book fills in the gaps and denounces the many myths of the politically drawn caricatures and stereotypes of workers who live in poverty in America. His call to action powerfully argues that we must simultaneously address the full range of interrelated problems that confront the poor instead of tackling one issue at a time. It is a compelling book that will shift the terms of and reinvigorate the debate about social justice in America."
—Bill Bradley
“The 'working poor' ought to be an oxymoron, because no one who works should be impoverished. In this thoughtful assessment of poverty in twenty-first century America, David Shipler shows why so many working Americans remain poor, and offers a powerful guide for how to resuscitate the American dream. A tour de force of a forgotten land.”
—Robert B. Reich, University Professor, Brandeis University, and former U.S. Secretary of Labor
From the Inside Flap
From the author of the Pulitzer Prize winning Arab and Jew, a new book that presents a searing, intimate portrait of working American families struggling against insurmountable odds to escape poverty.
As David K. Shipler makes clear in this powerful, humane study, the invisible poor are engaged in the activity most respected in American ideology hard, honest work. But their version of the American Dream is a nightmare: low-paying, dead-end jobs; the profound failure of government to improve upon decaying housing, health care, and education; the failure of families to break the patterns of child abuse and substance abuse. Shipler exposes the interlocking problems by taking us into the sorrowful, infuriating, courageous lives of the poor white and black, Asian and Latino, citizens and immigrants. We encounter them every day, for they do jobs essential to the American economy.
We meet drifting farmworkers in North Carolina, exploited garment workers in New Hampshire, illegal immigrants trapped in the steaming kitchens of Los Angeles restaurants, addicts who struggle into productive work from the cruel streets of the nation s capital each life another aspect of a confounding, far-reaching urgent national crisis. And unlike most works on poverty, this one delves into the calculations of some employers as well their razor-thin profits, their anxieties about competition from abroad, their frustrations in finding qualified workers.
This impassioned book not only dissects the problems, but makes pointed, informed recommendations for change. It is a book that stands to make a difference.
From the Back Cover
--Barbara Ehrenreich,
author, Nickel and Dimed
"Through a combination of hard facts and moving accounts of hardships endured by individuals, David Shipler's new book fills in the gaps and denounces the many myths of the politically drawn caricatures and stereotypes of workers who live in poverty in America. His call to action powerfully argues that we must simultaneously address the full range of interrelated problems that confront the poor instead of tackling one issue at a time. It is a compelling book that will shift the terms of and reinvigorate the debate about social justice in America."
--Bill Bradley
"The 'working poor' ought to be an oxymoron, because no one who works should be impoverished. In this thoughtful assessment of poverty in twenty-first century America, David Shipler shows why so many working
Americans remain poor, and offers a powerful guide for how to resuscitate the American dream. A tour de force of a forgotten land."
--Robert B. Reich, University Professor, Brandeis University, and
former U.S. Secretary of Labor
About the Author
From The Washington Post
"The millions who are poor in the United States tend to become increasingly invisible," Michael Harrington wrote in The Other America (1962). "Here is a great mass of people, yet it takes an effort of the intellect and will even to see them." Harrington, a prominent democratic socialist, revealed that not all Americans were sharing in the prosperity of the Eisenhower era. The Other America brought the poor out of the shadows, appealed to the conscience of the educated middle class, became a bestseller and helped to inspire the War on Poverty. For a decade or so the existence of poor housing and poor health in the world's wealthiest country was regarded as a national disgrace, a social problem addressed with the sort of fervor later directed at illegal drug use and the graduated income tax. Compassion for the poor dwindled amid the stagflation of the late 1970s. It was ridiculed during Reagan revolution, whose old-fashioned belief in self-reliance reached its peak in 1996, when President Bill Clinton backed legislation to replace federal welfare with hard work.
Now poverty seems once again to have been forgotten. For the past 20 years the mainstream media have been obsessed with the lifestyles of the rich and famous -- not those of the poor and dispossessed. In The Working Poor, David K. Shipler directs our gaze to the people we encounter every day, yet hardly seem to notice, the low-wage workers who flip burgers at McDonald's, stock the shelves at Wal-Mart and sew the hems of designer clothes. Their misery hides in plain sight. Like Harrington's work of a generation ago, The Working Poor delivers an unsettling message for the comfortably well-off and complacent: "It is time to be ashamed."
Shipler's focus is not the lazy, the homeless, the seriously mentally ill -- the sort of people whom you might expect to be poor. Instead he chronicles the plight of those Americans who have jobs but still live in poverty. It is remarkable how many people fit that description. A conservative estimate would be between 35 and 40 million. "Poverty" is not easy to define, and regional differences in the cost of living make nationwide measurements particularly difficult. According to the federal government, in 2002 a family of four -- one adult, three children -- that earned $18,500 had an annual income above the poverty level. An adult in such a household, working forty hours a week, five days a week, would have to earn more than $8.80 an hour to remain above the official poverty line. That is an hourly wage 70 percent higher than the current federal minimum wage. However you measure poverty, it has been growing in recent years, along with disparities in wealth. One-fifth of the American population, those at the very bottom of the income scale, have a median net worth of $7,900.
I've spent a fair amount of time among the working poor, and Shipler conveys the stress and anxiety and chaos of their lives with extraordinary skill. There is nothing simple about the poverty he depicts. Shipler spent five years investigating the subject, and the depth of his reporting conveys a reality too complex to fit neatly into any liberal or conservative scheme. Poverty emerges in these pages not as the inevitable result of an unjust society or as a reflection of individual failings, but as a mixture of both. "Liberals don't want to see the dysfunctional family," Shipler argues, "and conservatives want to see nothing else." He supplies a haunting portrait of a woman whose upward mobility in the service industry is blocked, in large part, by the fact that she has no teeth. Poverty was responsible for her losing the teeth -- and lacking the sort of smile assistant managers like to see behind the counter, she became trapped in poverty. We meet victims of sexual abuse trying to recover from the trauma, migrant workers sleeping 12 to a room, sweatshop workers exploited by greedy employers, teachers and social workers struggling to lift children from the lower depths.
The sort of problems that are merely inconvenient for an upper-middle-class family -- a flat tire, a baby sitter who fails to show up, a bout of the flu -- can prove disastrous for the working poor. They live precariously near the edge, without job security, health insurance or money in the bank. A boss at Wal-Mart expects workers to come whenever needed, morning, noon or night. A labor contractor deducts a smuggler's fee, along with room and board, from a migrant worker's weekly paycheck. The owner of a sweatshop suddenly closes the business, then reopens at a new location, leaving workers with weeks of unpaid wages. And it's not just unscrupulous employers who prey on the poor. Financial institutions that offer easy credit can plunge them into debt. The annual interest charged by some check-cashing outfits -- where the poor must often do their banking -- can reach 521 percent.
No matter how close to the bottom a family may fall, there is always a relentless, downward pull. "Poverty leads to health and housing problems," Shipler explains. "Poor health and housing lead to cognitive deficiencies and school problems. Educational failure leads to poverty." There is no simple way out of such vicious circles, and Shipler advocates remedies that are as complex as the social problems he addresses. A more responsive network of social services could simultaneously offer legal, medical, educational and even parenting support. A higher minimum wage and health insurance for all Americans would help, too. Shipler's proposals defy ideological labels; they are guided by a pragmatic appreciation of what might actually get results.
The Working Poor is not an easy read, and the darkness of the subject is only partly to blame. Shipler's hard work deserved a better editor. The structure of the book is sometimes confusing, and it would have benefited from a tighter focus, with fewer individual portraits and digressions. But this is an essential book. Even those who lack pity and compassion should be concerned about what is now happening to the poor. One of the great achievements of postwar America was the creation of a stable middle-class society. That achievement is unraveling. At the moment, the dispossessed are politically apathetic, distracted by video games and cable television, the modern equivalent of bread and circuses. Yet throughout our history, poverty and great inequalities of wealth have led to political extremism and social unrest. The Working Poor and Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed, a book that eloquently covers some of the same ground, should be required reading not just for every member of Congress, but for every eligible voter. Now that this invisible world has been so powerfully brought to light, its consequences can no longer be ignored or denied.
Reviewed by Eric Schlosser
Copyright 2004, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Money and Its Opposite
You know, Mom, being poor is very expensive. —Sandy Brash, at age twelve
Tax time in poor neighborhoods is not April. It is January. And “income tax” isn’t what you pay; it’s what you receive. As soon as the W-2s arrive, working folks eager for their checks from the Internal Revenue Service hurry to the tax preparers, who have flourished and gouged impoverished laborers since the welfare time limits enacted by Congress in 1996. The checks that come from Washington include not only a refund of taxes withheld, but an additional payment known as the Earned Income Tax Credit, which is designed to subsidize low-wage working families. The refunds and subsidies are sometimes banked for savings toward a car, a house, an education; but they are often needed immediately for overdue bills and large purchases that can’t be funded from the trickle of wages throughout the year.
Christie, a child-care worker in Akron, earned too little to owe taxes but got $1,700 as an Earned Income Credit one year, which enabled her to avoid the Salvation Army’s used-furniture store and instead buy a new matching set of comfortable black couches and loveseats for her living room in public housing.
Caroline Payne’s check went for a down payment on her house in New Hampshire. “I used my income tax and paid a thousand down,” she said proudly. When she sold it five and a half years later and her daughter lent her money to rent a truck for her move, she planned to pay her back “when I get my taxes.”
“I’m waitin’ for my income tax to come in so I can pay my real estate taxes,” said Tom King, a single father and lumberjack who lived in a trailer on his own land.
Debra Hall, who had started at a Cleveland bakery, was keen with anticipation after filing her first tax return. “I’ll get $3,079 back! What am I gonna do with it? Pay all my bills off,” she declared, “and I haven’t had anything new in the house. Do some good with it, that’s for sure. Minor repairs on my car. The bills are first, for my credit [rating], to get all my back debts paid. It will be well spent.”
The Earned Income Tax Credit is one of those rare anti-poverty programs that appeal both to liberals and conservatives, invoking the virtue of both government help and self-help. You don’t get it unless you have some earned income, and since its payments are linked to your tax return, you don’t get it unless you file one. That leaves out low-wage workers—especially undocumented immigrants—who get paid under the table in cash and think they’re better off avoiding the IRS. By filing, however, they would end up ahead, because they’d get to keep everything they earned and would receive a payment on top of that. The benefits kick in at fairly high levels—at earnings of less than $33,692, for example, for a worker who supported more than one child in 2003. At the lower income levels, the Earned Income Tax Credit can add the equivalent of a dollar or two an hour to a worker’s wage.
Enacted in 1975, the program was expanded under Presidents Reagan, Bush, and Clinton, and in 2003 paid more than $32 billion to 18 million households. Treasury officials worry about erroneous claims, honest or fraudulent, which may rise to 27 to 32 percent of the total.1 On the other hand, an estimated 10 to 15 percent of those eligible don’t file for it,2 partly because employers and unions often don’t tell workers that it exists. The presidents of two local unions in Washington, D.C., for example, one representing janitors and the other parking garage attendants, had never heard of the Earned Income Tax Credit until I mentioned it to them. And I have not yet come across a single worker or boss who knew that with a simple form called a W-5, filed with the employer, a low-wage employee could get some of the payments in advance during the year. When I mentioned the W-5 to Debra Hall and she then asked at her bakery, the woman who handled the payroll waved her away impatiently and said she knew nothing about it. Later, the tax preparer told Debra it was better just to wait and get the payment in one lump sum after she filed her return.
It sure is better—if you’re the preparer. With cunning creativity, the preparers have devised schemes to separate low-wage workers from as much of their refunds and Earned Income Credits as feasible. The marvel of electronic filing, the speedy direct deposit into a bank account, the high-interest loan masquerading as a “rapid refund” all promise a sudden flush of dollars to cash-starved families. The trouble is, getting money costs money.
The preparers operate from sleazy check-cashing joints and from street-level outposts of respectable corporations. They do for a hefty fee what their clients could do for themselves for free with the math skills and the courage to tackle a 1040, or with a computer and a bank account to speed filing and receipt. But most low-wage workers don’t have the math, the courage, or the computer, and many don’t even have the bank account. They are so desperate for the check that they give up a precious $100 or so to get everything done quickly and correctly. “You get so scared,” said Debra Hall, who paid $95 to have her simple return done after ending twenty-one years of welfare. “I don’t know why it’s so scary, but I’d rather have it done right the first time.”
She was probably wise, because another disadvantage of being poor is that you’ve been more likely since 1999 to face an audit by the IRS. In that year, 1.36 percent of the returns filed by taxpayers making under $25,000 were audited, compared with 1.15 percent of those making $100,000 or more. The scrutiny was instigated by Republican congressional leaders who feared abuses of the Earned Income Tax Credit. In the face of bad publicity, the IRS shifted the balance in 2000 by auditing 0.6 percent of those under $25,000 versus 1.0 percent of those over $100,000. Thereafter, the audit rate tilted back and forth, to .86 and .69 percent, respectively, in 2001, then to .64 and .75 in 2002.3 In other words, as the IRS lost enforcement personnel, it dramatically reduced its scrutiny of well-to-do taxpayers, whose returns were once audited at the rate of 10 percent. This despite the fact that audits at the upper levels of income naturally tend to recover more dollars in lost revenue.
Evon Johnson never dared do another return herself after the IRS charged her $2,072 in taxes, penalties, and interest. Newly arrived from Honduras, she was working from 5 a.m. for a cleaning service in Boston that never withheld taxes and never sent her a W-2. She didn’t know they were supposed to do either. “I did my taxes, I fill it out, fine,” she said. But not so fine, evidently. “Three years after or four years after, IRS contact me saying that I owe them . . . like, $2,072. ‘Why do I owe you?’ And they say: because I didn’t declare my taxes. I say I did. . . . They say no. . . . I sent them a letter saying I was sending them $1,072 I think it was, ’cause I didn’t have no money at the time, and I was going to make small installments for the rest of the money. . . . You know what they did? I had a bank account, and they took the money from my bank account—every penny I had.” Ever since, she has happily paid $100 a year to a tax preparer, $100 a year for peace of mind. “I don’t want the IRS back on me,” she explained. “He do it and he sign it and put everything, so if any mistake, he gonna be the one who will have to deal with them.”
By the end of February, H&R Block’s storefront office on a dismal stretch of Washington’s 14th Street looked like a well-used campaign headquarters a week after Election Day. Most computer screens were dark, and the place was quiet and cavernous. All the desks were empty but one, occupied by Claudia Rivera, who used to prepare returns without charge at a library in Virginia. She and the manager, Carl Caton, didn’t have much to do now that the rush had passed, so they were happy to sit at a keyboard and explain.
Each form the taxpayer needed carried a fee: $41 for a 1040, $10 for an EIC (the Earned Income Credit), $1 for each W-2, and so on. Electronic filing cost another $25. So a simple return with two W-2s filed electronically would run $78. But it didn’t stop there. Block had a smorgasbord of services for people who lived on the edge. If you had no bank account, your refund could be loaded onto an ATM card that charged $2 per withdrawal. Or a temporary account could be opened into which the IRS payment could be deposited for a fee of $24.95. If you were enticed by Block’s offer of a “rapid refund” and wanted a check in a day or two, you paid H&R Block an additional $50 to $90, depending on the amount you were getting. The fee on 14th Street could be as much as $50 on a $200 refund, up to $90 for $2,000 or more.4
This was actually a loan, and for a very short time. Filing electronically usually gets you a check in two and a half weeks, according to the IRS, and five days sooner if it’s deposited directly into a bank account. At the most, then, the “rapid refund” loan, issued a day or two after filing, would run about fifteen days, which made the $90 fee on a $2,000 payment equivalent to an annual interest rate of 108 percent. At the least, the loan could run as little as four days, propelling the annualized rate to 410 percent on $2,000, and 2,281 percent on $200. (The highest percentage is incurred if the timing occurs perfectly: the return is filed by the IRS’s weekly deadline of noon Thursday, the loan check is not issued until after banks close Friday, the taxpayer can’t put it into his account until Monday, and the IRS ...
Product details
- Publisher : Knopf
- Publication date : February 3, 2004
- Edition : 1st
- Language : English
- Print length : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0375408908
- ISBN-13 : 978-0375408908
- Item Weight : 1.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.6 x 1.15 x 9.6 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,170,722 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,973 in Sociology (Books)
- #4,801 in Economics (Books)
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About the author

David K. Shipler
Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author and Former Foreign
Correspondent of The New York Times
Writes online at The Shipler Report, http://shiplerreport.blogspot.com/
Born Dec. 3, 1942. Grew up in Chatham, N.J. Married with three children. Graduated from Dartmouth in 1964. Served in U.S. Navy as officer on a destroyer, 1964-66.
Joined The New York Times as a news clerk in 1966. Promoted to city staff reporter, 1968. Covered housing, poverty, politics. Won awards from the American Political Science Association, the New York Newspaper Guild, and elsewhere.
From 1973-75 served as a New York Times correspondent in Saigon, covering South Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand. Reported also from Burma.
Spent a semester in 1975 at the Russian Institute of Columbia U. studying Russian language and Soviet politics, economics and history to prepare for assignment in Moscow. Correspondent in Moscow Bureau for four years, 1975-79; Moscow Bureau Chief from 1977-79. Wrote the best-seller Russia: Broken Idols, Solemn Dreams, published in 1983, updated in 1989, which won the Overseas Press Club Award in 1983 as the best book that year on foreign affairs.
From 1979-84, served as Bureau Chief of The New York Times in Jerusalem. Was co-recipient (with Thomas Friedman) of the 1983 George Polk Award for covering Lebanon War.
Spent a year, 1984-85, as a visiting scholar at the Brookings Institution in Washington to write Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land, which explores the mutual perceptions and relationships between Arabs and Jews in Israel and the West Bank. The book won the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction and was extensively revised and updated in 2002. Was executive producer, writer and narrator of a two-hour PBS documentary on Arab and Jew, which won a 1990 Dupont-Columbia award for broadcast journalism, and of a one-hour film, Arab and Jew: Return to the Promised Land, which aired on PBS in August 2002.
Served as Chief Diplomatic Correspondent in the Washington Bureau of The New York Times until 1988. From 1988-90 was a senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, writing on transitions to democracy in Russia and Eastern Europe for The New Yorker and other publications.
His book A Country of Strangers: Blacks and Whites in America, based on five years of research into stereotyping and interactions across racial lines, was published in 1997. One of three authors invited by President Clinton to participate in his first town meeting on race.
His book, The Working Poor: Invisible in America, was a national best-seller in 2004 and 2005. It was a finalist for the 2005 National Book Critics Circle Award and the New York Public Library Helen Bernstein Award. It won an Outstanding Book Award from The Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights at Simmons College and led to awards from the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, the New York Labor Communications Council, and the D.C. Employment Justice Center. He has written two books on civil liberties, the first published in 2011, The Rights of the People: How Our Search for Safety Invades Our Liberties and the second, Rights at Risk: The Limits of Liberty in Modern America, in 2012.
Shipler has received a Martin Luther King Jr. Social Justice Award from Dartmouth and the following honorary degrees: Doctor of Letters from Middlebury College and Glassboro State College (N.J.), Doctor of Laws from Birmingham-Southern College, and Master of Arts from Dartmouth College, where he served on the Board of Trustees from 1993 to 2003. Member of the Pulitzer jury for general nonfiction in 2008, chair in 2009. Has taught at Princeton and American University, as writer-in-residence at U. of Southern California, a Woodrow Wilson Fellow on about fifteen campuses, and a Montgomery Fellow and Visiting Professor of Government at Dartmouth.
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Customers find the book well-written and easy to read, with a narrative that takes them through countless stories and provides interesting insights into different lives. The book is eye-opening and humbling, with one customer noting how it helps paint a picture of all the forces at work. Customers appreciate the writing style, with one describing it as ethnographic, and another mentioning how it doesn't lionize the poor.
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Customers find the book insightful and informative, with one customer noting it provides relevant details about life and poverty, while another mentions it encourages broad thinking.
"...It creates a narrative that is easy to follow and loaded with cultural details that help frame such a dire issue...." Read more
"Insightful..." Read more
"This book gives excellent insight into the lives of the working poor...." Read more
"This book is a revelation! David Shipler did an outstanding job. This is a used paperback, but the quality is very good with nice crisp pages...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's narrative, which takes readers through countless stories and provides interesting insights into different lives.
"...It creates a narrative that is easy to follow and loaded with cultural details that help frame such a dire issue...." Read more
"...So many sad but true stories...." Read more
"...Nope. Not pornographic at all. I felt it had a good narrative, but it runs out of gas about 2/3rds of the way through...." Read more
"...A holistic approach, talking to real people and telling their stories, showing how every aspect of their lives is intertwined and the devastating..." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, noting it is well-crafted and ethnographic, with one customer highlighting that the author doesn't lionize the poor.
"Written in an ethnographic (pseudo-ethnographic) style that is easy to read, this book will appeal those who care about the poor in America...." Read more
"...and the lives of the working class, this is a strong and well written account that addresses the needs of improvement," Read more
"This is a very well-written book. I suppose this is not a surprise from a Pulitzer Prize winning author...." Read more
"...He is a very good writer- easy to read and follow, with all the interruptions I have had today- I have been able to keep following him quite easily...." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and follow.
"Written in an ethnographic (pseudo-ethnographic) style that is easy to read, this book will appeal those who care about the poor in America...." Read more
"...It creates a narrative that is easy to follow and loaded with cultural details that help frame such a dire issue...." Read more
""The Working Poor" by David Shipler is not an easy read...." Read more
"...subject and bring it down to a bare basic level that everyone can understand...." Read more
Customers find the book interesting, with one mentioning that each story is compelling.
"...look into the lives of "forgotten Americans." This is captivating, eye-opening and makes one re-evaluate their own troubles...." Read more
"...Overall, I enjoyed reading this book." Read more
"Poverty is complex, and this book is interesting in the way it shows the interaction between failures which cause it. &#..." Read more
"...She found this book very interesting and highly recommends everyone read this book." Read more
Customers find the book effective, with one review noting how it helps paint a picture of all the forces at work in the lives of the working poor.
"Service of this product was fast and effective, I would do service again with this company. Product was new and in tact" Read more
"...This book helps paint a picture of all the forces at work as people are struggling to make ends meet. Extremely well done. Highly recommended." Read more
"...The author does not do a great job at defining the chapters and weaving a greater pattern, so after the 15th story you begin to feel like you have..." Read more
"...The book's title is apt, because in many cases people in poverty truly do work...." Read more
Customers find the book eye-opening.
"...the lives of "forgotten Americans." This is captivating, eye-opening and makes one re-evaluate their own troubles...." Read more
"Eye opening....the working poor are all around us" Read more
"I ordered this book for a college course. It is an eye opener." Read more
"Eye-opening without a doubt, and angering as well. If you have any passion for advocacy for the poor, this book will continue to fuel your flame." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's humbling message and find it angering, with one customer highlighting its focus on the experiences of the poor.
"I have this multiple times. It's a great read with humbling message." Read more
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"Eye-opening without a doubt, and angering as well. If you have any passion for advocacy for the poor, this book will continue to fuel your flame." Read more
"I have read this book twice already. It features sad and tragic stories of Americans living in poverty and their struggle to survive on what income..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2007Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseUnless, perhaps, you're in entertainment or technology. By sticking with his subjects, earning their respect and engaging in painstaking research, David Shipler has connected the dots in "The Working Poor" to give us a comprehensive, emotionally powerful synopsis of the multiple causes of poverty in America. Using the life narratives of diverse subjects (all but one of whom I found entirely sympathetic), Shipler rarely points fingers but instead explains how a combination of his subjects' family histories and character traits, relative lack of formal education, living conditions, incessant agonizing over work-parenting balance, and minimal to nonexistent cash flow collide with varying policies within the public and private sectors along with the employers, coworkers and bureaucrats with whom they deal.
Reading Shipler's research, it is clear there is no "one size fits all" solution to the condition of the working poor. For that reason, the author's concise summary of key policy debates can be excused. This book is meant to elicit thought first, then understanding, then action.
Based on my own interactions with the working poor and after having read this moving work, I offer the following observations:
1) More free classes on parenting skills are needed to help create a better environment for at-risk infants and young people.
2) Government must step up its commitment to clean, safe, affordable housing in new and innovative ways. Too much is spent on defense and not enough on domestic programs. Affordable housing needs additional support from both the legislative and executive branches at the Federal and State levels. Homeownership education programs for first-time homebuyers appear in good supply, but the stock of accessible housing needs work.
3) Free financial literacy instruction in the vernacular of the street or in an immigrant's native tongue must be widely offered. Stock market board games sponsored by local companies in high schools sound nice but don't address the proper issues - needs versus wants, saving versus spending, developing a budget, etc.
4) Reading is a core foundation. "Reading aloud" and reading instruction at the preschool level is essential. It helps develop a core competency, and it (hopefully) demonstrates that someone cares.
5) Customized bundles of social services delivered by a local coalition of volunteers, nonprofits and for-profits should increasingly be built into new housing supply. Bring parenting, financial literacy, housing maintenance, etc., skills to at-risk individuals and families where they live. Gather a (somewhat) captive audience in familiar, non-threatening surroundings. The "community stability" aspect of affordable housing is starting to catch on, and this trend must be encouraged.
6) Reform school funding formulas to make the calibre of instruction more equitable across districts.
7) Place the snowballing cry for universal access to college education in the proper perspective. Where should finite government resources go - to support vulnerable children getting started in life or to those more ready to enter the halls of ivy? Fund the sons and daughters of the working poor first, and let them find their way. They may find their way through JobsCorps, an apprenticeship or some other route; perhaps college. Let's not put the cart before the horse.
Just recently, a middle-aged woman among the working poor whom I know, doing well in her job, was presented by her employer with the opportunity to open a 401K as her year-end bonus. The employer assumed this would be a good way to help her save. Her response? She needed money for new tires for her old car, and she needed it now. The employer ended up providing this woman with a scaled-back bonus and a starter 401K. Several weeks later, my friend left her car keys in the ignition as she ran into a convenience store. When she returned, she found the car gone. Reporting the incident to the police, she was cited for a section of the municipal code that states motorists may not leave keys in the ignition, and she was promptly fined $100. She wanted to fight this misdemeanor but said she couldn't afford a lawyer. A friend gave her the $100 to pay her fine. She has more recently declared bankruptcy. Her only vice is smoking.
Shipler is right on the money. We are facing a class epidemic in America. The first line of defense in this fight may not be government. It may simply be a growing number of fellow Americans who bother to take the extra five or ten minutes necessary to read to a child, caution a parent on his or her attitudes, run down the street and buy basic groceries, or make a forgivable loan. Micro, then macro. Macro may take too long.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2006Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseIf you're debating on this book or "Nickle and Dimed" ... get this one! Shipler has managed to take a difficult subject and bring it down to a bare basic level that everyone can understand. Having lived a life of the working poor since I was born, I relate to everything in this book. I know all these people cause they are all me at some point or another. He hits the nail on the head describing a life that revolves around "things working out". If the child support payments keep coming, if the food stamps hold out, if the car keeps running, if the price of gas doesn't sky rocket, if the kids don't get sick, if my mom keeps watching the kids, if i can get some overtime this paycheck, if my landlord will let me pay every two weeks.... All these people are just one "if" away from being homeless. Shipler states head on that the federal minimum wage is $4.04 BELOW the national poverty line. That should stir genuine and outright anger! There is no way to justify a country as rich as America deliberately putting the majority of its population BELOW poverty. This country builds its empire on our backs and refuses to open the door and let us in! It's about time someone read the facts, absorbed the facts and DID SOMETHING ABOUT IT! Read this book, share this book, talk about this book, write about this book and then do something to make a change, do something to make a difference. Everyone that has some degree of comfort owes it to society to make a difference, since it's because of us....because of our sacrifice, because of our cheap labor, because of our poverty that you're so comfortable. If there was ever a must read book, this is the one.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 4, 2014Before you get deep into the details recorded in this book -- and the book is ALL about the details -- there are some important points you need to keep in mind. The author mentions them in the beginning but then they seem to get dropped as the details of people's live keep emerging:
1) What we call "poverty" in the United States equates to a very wealthy lifestyle in many other nations.
2) Human beings are free agents and they are capable of making choices. However limited our choices may be by circumstances or experience, we CAN still choose.
3) Part of the premise of this book is that "perception is reality." While our poor are not poor by standards of other countries, they and the American culture perceive them as poor and that is the problem.
If you keep those ideas fresh in your mind while you allow yourself to become immersed in the VOLUMES of touching personal examples the author records in this book, I think you will gain a great deal from reading it. It's quite obvious that poverty is not one single condition that we can solve by throwing money at it and providing opportunities and benefits to the poor. How impoverished people use those benefits and how they are accustomed to dealing with their conditions IS based on myriads of factors including but not limited to: immigrant status, family and culture, education, intelligence, emotional abuse, addictions -- anything from smoking and junk food to heroin, physical illness, choices, et cetera, et cetera. The author makes this very clear and he takes you through countless stories -- one after the other -- of impoverished people who apparently cannot rise above their circumstances in part because these kinds of factors.
Another thing he continually re-emphasizes is that rising above poverty usually means getting into a "perfect storm" kind of situation. All the important elements -- financial, emotional, intellectual, job opportunity and LUCK (of having no major tragedies happening to interfere) need to be there. I agree with his assessment here. The kind of economy we have right now does not make it easy for one of the working poor to make it, Horatio Alger style, on just determination and hard work alone. It's wrong for anyone to assume that if only a person pulls themselves up by their bootstraps they can make it, because America is the Land of Opportunity. We need to quit falling back on this myth.
That being said, I found myself going through an entire range of emotions because of the human examples in the book. I felt literally EVERY emotion -- anger, sadness, joy, disgust, horror, empathy, sympathy. A lot of the time I was frustrated, because so often an objective observer can see things that the people inside the situations themselves cannot see. Get used to feeling frustrated because that was the one unifying theme throughout. This is not a book with a lot of easy answers.
Although I suspect the author is a liberal in his political leanings, he has been an accurate reporter in this book and an honest seeker. He's shown all sides of the question of the working poor and he's revealed that it's an enormously complicated web of problems, not easily resolved either by left or right style solutions.
Sometimes, the author can be a bit inconsistent if it's opinions you are looking for. For example, he defends the need for television access. He states that this is often the only affordable and accessible entertainment available for poor families, so even if it does cost a couple hundred dollars a month for them to keep it, he thinks it's a worthwhile investment. At another point in the book, he blames television advertising for creating the consumer culture that induces poor people to waste the little money they have on things they don't need. While this somewhat contradictory position is consistent with reality, I think it might be better for the poor to turn OFF the TV and find other avenues for amusement -- ones that don't involve exposure to multiple advertisements and fictional cultural expectations.
The reader needs to be able to think about these stories, read between the lines, remember that often the people are speaking for themselves and what you are getting is what they will tell an interested interviewer about their situation. What people report about their situation, or what they perceive about it, is not necessarily the truth. The reader needs to sift, be objective and then be able to apply their own judgment. Otherwise you're in danger of being sunk in the emotions.
The main thing I got out of this book (perhaps NOT the author's intent!) is that, in Jesus' words "the poor will always be with us."
Top reviews from other countries
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よっさ蕪村Reviewed in Japan on July 22, 20105.0 out of 5 stars やるせない「出口ナシ」の状況に絶句
Format: PaperbackVerified Purchaseいくら一生懸命に働いても家賃と治療代に消えてゆく最下層の人々を描く。機会の平等が国是である米国の暗い実態を余すところ無く書いている。例は氷山の一角と思われるが、「働けど働けど暮らし楽にならず」を地で行く人々は(彼らの)神を信じることができるのだろうか。
Tracy AitkenReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 12, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Buy this book.
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseA fine price of work and recommended to anyone interested in the state of present day America. It makes one grateful to live in the UK - although our benefit system has, and still is open to abuse I remain thankful that such a safety net exists for the poor and vulnerable in our society. No country as wealthy as the United States should have citizens living in the conditions described in this book.
Almost 50 years ago Robert F Kennedy visited poor communities in Mississippi where he found people living in tar paper shacks and in one case a whole family living in a burnt out car. That conditions have barely improved for some is a devastating indictment of years of neglect of those most in need.
Do buy this book - it is a stark reminder of the failure of politics, politicians and simple compassion.
Yang LiuReviewed in the United Kingdom on July 9, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic insight into the lives of some people who are ...
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseFantastic insight into the lives of some people who are trying their best and stumbling through life. It's a great book that makes you think about look twice about things in everyday life.
Vasiliki CharalampidouReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 28, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Very good copy! I' m really pleased with the condition ...
Format: PaperbackVerified PurchaseVery good copy!I' m really pleased with the condition of my new book!
Timothy BarsonReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 5, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Great deal, great condition
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseArrived in better nick than expected. Ridiculously good deal.






