Hired

Six Months Undercover in Low-Wage Britain

Longlisted for the Orwell Prize, 2019 ____________ The Times Round-up of the Best Non-fiction Paperbacks, 2019 TheTimes Best Current Affairs and Big Ideas Book of the Year, 2018 'A very discomforting book, no matter what your politics might be... very good' Sunday Times 'Potent, disturbing and revelatory' Evening Standard We all define ourselves by our profession. But what if our job was demeaning, poorly paid, and tedious? Cracking open Britain's divisions journalist James Bloodworth spends six months living and working across Britain, taking on the country's most gruelling jobs. He lives on the meagre proceeds and discovers the anxieties and hopes of those he encounters,... alles anzeigen expand_more

Longlisted for the Orwell Prize, 2019

____________

The Times Round-up of the Best Non-fiction Paperbacks, 2019

TheTimes Best Current Affairs and Big Ideas Book of the Year, 2018

'A very discomforting book, no matter what your politics might be... very good' Sunday Times



'Potent, disturbing and revelatory' Evening Standard

We all define ourselves by our profession. But what if our job was demeaning, poorly paid, and tedious? Cracking open Britain's divisions journalist James Bloodworth spends six months living and working across Britain, taking on the country's most gruelling jobs. He lives on the meagre proceeds and discovers the anxieties and hopes of those he encounters, including working-class British, young students striving to make ends meet, and Eastern European immigrants.



From the Staffordshire Amazon warehouse to the taxi-cabs of Uber, Bloodworth narrates how traditional working-class communities have been decimated by the move to soulless service jobs with no security, advancement or satisfaction. This is a gripping examination of Brexit Britain, a divided nation which needs to understand the true reality of how other people live and work before it can heal.



James Bloodworth is the former editor of Left Foot Forward, the influential political website. He is a fortnightly columnist for the International Business Times and regularly contributes to the Independent, Guardian, New Statesman and Wall Street Journal.



Potent, disturbing and revelatory... [Bloodworth] sets out to see something we should know more about than we do, and he tells the story of what he found well.



A very discomforting book, no matter what your politics might be... very good



Grim but necessary reading... Theresa May should horrify [Bloodworth] by picking up a copy of Hired and learning from it.



An extraordinary and unsettling journey into the way modern Britons work. It is Down and Out In Paris and London for the gig economy age.



Exceptional... Bloodworth is the best young left wing writer Britain has produced in years.



Powerful and important... [Hired] reveals the true reality of the low-pay economy in Britain today.



Elegant and frequently shocking.



Unflinching... a refreshing antidote to the fashionable post-work these written from steel-and-ivory towers.



A wake-up call to us all. A very graphic and authentic journey exposing the hard and miserable working life faced by too many people living in Britain today.



Whatever you think of the political assertions in this book - and I disagree with many of them - this is an important investigation into the reality of low-wage Britain. Whether you are on the Right, Left or Centre, anybody who believes in solidarity and social justice should read this book.



I emerged from James Bloodworth's quietly devastating and deeply disturbing book convinced that the 'gig economy' is simply another way in which the powerful are enabled to oppress the disadvantaged



A truly devastating examination of the vulnerable human underbelly of Britain's labour market, shining a bright light on the unjust and exploitative practices that erode the morale and living standards of working-class communities.



James Bloodworth pulls back the carpet and exposes the rotten floorboards of Britain's low wage, insecure and exploitative economy, describing living and working conditions that Dickens would recognise. A wake-up call to our political elites to genuinely tackle the gross inequality at the heart of our society.



Hired is a refreshing antidote to the fashionable post-work theses written from steel-and-ivory towers



James Bloodworth's unflinching account of life and work in the towns we have come to know as being "left behind" exposes the mercilessness of the low-wage economy and modern capitalism

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